| name | salary-counter-offer |
| description | You got the job offer. Now how do you negotiate? A step-by-step framework for countering salary offers without burning bridges. |
Salary Counter-Offer
When to Activate
- "I got an offer, should I negotiate?"
- "How do I counter this salary?"
- "They offered $X, what should I ask for?"
- "Is it okay to negotiate?"
- User mentions receiving a job offer
First: Should You Even Counter?
Almost always yes. Here's why:
| Fear | Reality |
|---|
| "They'll rescind the offer" | Almost never happens. Negotiating is expected. |
| "They'll think I'm greedy" | They'll think you know your worth. |
| "The offer is already fair" | Fair for who? They started low. |
| "I'm just grateful to get it" | Gratitude and negotiation coexist. |
The only time to NOT negotiate:
- They explicitly said "this is final, non-negotiable" (rare)
- You're already at the top of their published band
- The relationship would genuinely suffer (very rare)
The Counter Framework
Step 1: Buy Time
Never accept or counter on the spot.
"Thank you so much for the offer! I'm very excited. Can I have until [2-3 days] to review the full details?"
This is normal. They expect it. Use this time to:
- Research comparable salaries
- Prepare your counter
- Calm your nerves
Step 2: Know Your Number
Research before you respond:
| Source | Use It For |
|---|
| Levels.fyi, Glassdoor | Base salary ranges |
| Blind, Reddit | Real offers at this company |
| LinkedIn connections | DM people in similar roles |
| Recruiter (if applicable) | Ask: "What's the range for this role?" |
Your target: Top of their range, or 10-20% above offer if range unknown.
Step 3: The Counter Script
Structure:
- Express enthusiasm (genuine)
- State your counter
- Give a reason (brief)
- Keep door open
Example:
"I'm really excited about joining [Company] and this role. After reviewing the offer and considering my experience in [specific area], I was hoping we could discuss the base salary. I was thinking something in the range of $X. Is there flexibility there?"
Key phrases:
- "Is there flexibility?" (invites discussion)
- "I was hoping" (collaborative, not demanding)
- "In the range of" (gives them room)
Step 4: Handle Their Response
| They Say | You Do |
|---|
| "Yes, we can do $X" | Accept gracefully |
| "We can do $Y" (middle ground) | Decide if it's enough |
| "No, this is final" | Ask about other components |
| "We need to check" | Wait. Don't fill silence. |
If they say no to salary, pivot:
"I understand. Are there other components we could discuss? Signing bonus, equity, PTO, or start date flexibility?"
What You Can Negotiate (Beyond Salary)
| Component | Notes |
|---|
| Signing bonus | One-time, easier for them |
| Equity/RSUs | Can be significant over time |
| PTO days | Often flexible |
| Start date | Negotiate a break if needed |
| WFH days | Post-COVID, often negotiable |
| Title | Sometimes easier than money |
| Review timing | "6-month review with raise potential?" |
| Relocation | If applicable |
| Learning budget | Conferences, courses |
Common Mistakes
| ❌ Don't | Why |
|---|
| Accept immediately | Leaves money on table |
| Give a range ("$80-90k") | They'll hear the low end |
| Justify with personal expenses | They don't care about your rent |
| Threaten to walk | Unless you will |
| Negotiate via email only | Call is better for nuance |
| Counter too high (2x) | Looks out of touch |
The Psychology
What's happening on their side:
- They already decided they want YOU
- The hiring process is expensive — they don't want to restart
- HR has a range; first offer is rarely the max
- Your hiring manager may be your advocate
- They expect negotiation (budgets often assume it)
What this means for you:
You have more leverage than you feel. They're not doing you a favor — it's a business transaction.
Sample Counter Email
Subject: Re: Offer for [Role]
Hi [Name],
Thank you again for the offer — I'm genuinely excited about the opportunity to join [Company] and contribute to [specific project/team].
After reviewing the details, I'd like to discuss the base compensation. Given my [X years of experience / specific skill / comparable market rates], I was hoping for something closer to $[X]. Is there flexibility to adjust the base?
I'm also open to discussing other components if the base isn't flexible — signing bonus, equity, or PTO could work too.
Looking forward to discussing. I'm very much hoping we can make this work.
Best,
[Name]
After They Say Yes
- Get it in writing before celebrating
- Send a thank-you note
- Don't tell everyone you "won" — be gracious
- Start strong when you join
Decision Framework
If they meet your number: Accept.
If they offer a middle ground:
Ask yourself:
- Is this still above my minimum?
- Will I resent this in 6 months?
- Are there other upsides (growth, learning, flexibility)?
If they say no and it's below your minimum:
"I appreciate you trying. Can I have a day to think it over?"
Then actually decide. Walking away is okay.
Response Principles
When helping someone negotiate:
- Normalize it — They feel guilty. Tell them it's expected.
- Be specific — "Ask for $X" not "ask for more"
- Give scripts — They need words, not theory
- Reduce fear — The offer won't disappear
- Focus on preparation — Research > bravado