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How to Handle the Salary Question on Applications
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You're filling out a job application. Everything's going great. Then you see it:
"What are your salary expectations?"
Cue the internal panic.
Go too high and you might get filtered out. Go too low and you leave money on the table. Leave it blank and... will they even consider you?
Here's how to handle it.
The Core Problem
Salary negotiation is a power game, and whoever names a number first loses leverage. The application form is the company's way of getting you to name your number first.
Understanding this dynamic changes how you approach the question.
Strategy 1: The Range (If You Must Answer)
If the field is required, provide a range:
- Make the bottom of your range your actual target
- Make the top 15-20% above that
- Base it on market data, not your current salary
Example: If your research says the role pays $120-150K and you'd be happy at $135K:
"$135,000 – $160,000, depending on total compensation package"
The "depending on total compensation" part is key — it leaves room for equity, benefits, bonuses, and PTO to factor in.
Strategy 2: Deflect (If the Field Is Optional)
If you can leave it blank or type text, try:
"Open to discussing based on the full scope of the role and total compensation."
or
"Competitive with market rate for [role title] in [location/remote]."
This isn't evasive — it's strategic. You're signaling that you're flexible and informed without anchoring yourself.
Strategy 3: The Research-Based Approach
Come armed with data:
- Levels.fyi — best for tech roles
- Glassdoor — decent for most industries
- Payscale — good for non-tech roles
- Blind — anonymous comp data from tech workers
- LinkedIn Salary Insights — available on some postings
When you can say "Based on market data, roles like this in [city/remote] typically range from $X to $Y," you're negotiating from a position of knowledge.
What NOT to Do
Don't share your current salary
In many states, it's illegal for employers to ask. Even where it's legal, your current salary has nothing to do with what you're worth in this new role.
Don't lowball yourself
Women and underrepresented groups disproportionately underprice themselves. If you're not sure, err on the higher side. They'll negotiate you down — they won't negotiate you up.
Don't put $0 or $1
Some people do this to "skip" the field. It looks unprofessional and confuses ATS systems. Just use a range.
The Follow-Up Question
If a recruiter asks you directly on a call:
"I'd love to learn more about the role scope and total comp package before discussing specific numbers. What's the range you've budgeted for this position?"
Flip the question back. The recruiter knows the range — they're trained to get you to anchor first. A polite redirect levels the playing field.
Remember
Your salary expectations are not a confession. They're a negotiation data point. Treat them accordingly.
Getting interviews is step one. Make sure your resume is optimized so you have the leverage to negotiate from a position of strength.