Hourly
- Before
- $25.00
- After
- $25.75
- Increase
- +$0.75
Calculate your raise by step increase or percentage - and see how it compares to 2026 national benchmarks for public school teachers.
Quick Verdict
$52,000 + 3%
Default teacher scenario: +$1,560/year, +$130/month, and +$60 bi-weekly before taxes.
Profession Benchmarks
Teacher salary data looks contradictory until you separate full-time public school teachers from substitute, part-time, and tutoring roles.
National Average Teacher Salary
$46,590/year ($22.40/hr)
ZipRecruiter 2026
BLS Median (Elementary, experienced)
$62,340/year
BLS May 2024
NEA Average Starting Salary (2020-21)
$41,770/year
NEA Benchmark Report
25th Percentile
$33,500/year
ZipRecruiter 2026
75th Percentile
$57,000/year
ZipRecruiter 2026
Top Earners (90th pct)
$63,500/year
ZipRecruiter 2026
Highest Paying City
Soledad, CA: $69,694/yr
ZipRecruiter 2026
| Metric | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| National Average Teacher Salary | $46,590/year ($22.40/hr) | ZipRecruiter 2026 |
| BLS Median (Elementary, experienced) | $62,340/year | BLS May 2024 |
| NEA Average Starting Salary (2020-21) | $41,770/year | NEA Benchmark Report |
| 25th Percentile | $33,500/year | ZipRecruiter 2026 |
| 75th Percentile | $57,000/year | ZipRecruiter 2026 |
| Top Earners (90th pct) | $63,500/year | ZipRecruiter 2026 |
| Highest Paying City | Soledad, CA: $69,694/yr | ZipRecruiter 2026 |
Why is there a gap between BLS ($62K) and ZipRecruiter ($46K)? BLS tracks experienced public school teachers in full-time positions. ZipRecruiter includes substitute teachers, part-time roles, and private tutoring, which pulls the average down.
Sources: NEA Teacher Salary Benchmarks; BLS Kindergarten and Elementary School Teachers; ZipRecruiter Teacher Salary.
The default scenario uses a $52,000 salary and a 3% raise. Edit the salary or percentage to compare your district offer against teacher benchmarks.
Headline annual increase
$1,560.00
Five-year gain: $7.8K
Every field recalculates instantly. This page keeps the raise type as percentage while salary and raise amount stay editable.
Raise Type
Percentage %
Percentage mode is locked for this page. Change the raise amount below to test any percentage.
Compare the raise across every major pay period. The increase column stays highlighted so you can spot the practical change immediately.
| Period | Before | After | Increase | Increase % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Hourly | $25.00 | $25.75 | +$0.75 | +3.0% |
Daily | $200.00 | $206.00 | +$6.00 | +3.0% |
Weekly | $1,000.00 | $1,030.00 | +$30.00 | +3.0% |
Bi-weekly | $2,000.00 | $2,060.00 | +$60.00 | +3.0% |
Monthly | $4,333.33 | $4,463.33 | +$130.00 | +3.0% |
Annual | $52,000.00 | $53,560.00 | +$1,560.00 | +3.0% |
Actions
Copy the table, export CSV, share the URL, or reset the scenario.
Smart Insights
This raise roughly keeps pace with inflation but delivers minimal real gain. The national average teacher raise is around 3.2-3.4%. You are near the median - not losing ground, but not gaining either. Check the five-year effect
Nominal raise
+3.0%
Real raise after inflation
~+0.0%
Your purchasing power is roughly flat.
Annual gain
$1,560.00
5-year upside
$7.8K
Benchmark framing based on Mercer 2024 salary survey language referenced in the PRD.
Negotiation Script Generator
Based on the new compensation level, my annual pay would move from $52,000.00 to $53,560.00. That is a +3.0% increase, or about $1.6K more per year. After adjusting for a 3.0% inflation assumption, the real raise is +0.0%. I would like to discuss how this increase aligns with my scope, performance, and current market benchmarks.
Charts are lazy-loaded to protect performance, but they still update in real time as you edit the scenario.
Model a step increase, a lane change, or both without changing the standard raise calculator state.
Step Increase
Lane Change
What is a Step? An automatic annual raise for staying in your district, typically +$800-$2,000 per step, or 1.5-3%.
What is a Lane? A salary tier based on education level. Completing a Master's degree or 30 additional credits often adds $3,000-$8,000/year.
Combining both: A step increase plus lane change in the same year can deliver a 5-10% total raise.
This estimates your next contract year using your district's average step and lane values.
Step Increase
+$1,200.00
Lane Change
+$0.00
Total Raise
+$1,200 (+2.3%)
$52,000 -> $53,200
Monthly gain
+$100.00
Bi-weekly gain
+$46.15
Step & Lane Insight
This raise is below the 2026 inflation rate (~3%). After inflation, your real purchasing power is declining. NEA data shows this has been the pattern for many public school teachers since 2020.
Schedule raise
+2.3%
Annual gain
$1,200.00
Step increases are automatic annual raises for staying in the district. Lane changes happen when you complete additional education credits. Combining both in one year is often the fastest salary growth path inside public schools.
With 2026 inflation at approximately 3.0%, a 3.3% raise delivers only +0.3% real purchasing power gain.
| Year | Nominal Salary | Real Value (2026 $) | Real Gain |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | $52,000 | $52,000 | - |
| 2027 | $53,716 | $52,152 | +$152 |
| 2028 | $55,489 | $52,306 | +$306 |
| 2029 | $57,320 | $52,461 | +$461 |
| 2030 | $59,212 | $52,618 | +$618 |
5-year real salary gain: just +1.2% total - even with consistent raises. The fastest path to a meaningful real raise is a lane change for a one-time $3,000-$8,000 salary jump.
These national estimates help you locate yourself on a district salary schedule. Your local contract is the source of truth.
| Experience (Step) | BA | BA+30 | MA | MA+30 | PhD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 (Step 1) | $41,770 | $44,200 | $45,400 | $47,800 | $50,500 |
| Year 3 (Step 3) | $44,200 | $46,800 | $48,200 | $50,800 | $53,700 |
| Year 5 (Step 5) | $46,800 | $49,600 | $51,200 | $54,000 | $57,100 |
| Year 8 (Step 8) | $50,600 | $53,700 | $55,600 | $58,700 | $62,100 |
| Year 10 (Step 10) | $53,200 | $56,500 | $58,600 | $62,000 | $65,700 |
| Year 15 (Step 15) | $58,900 | $62,700 | $65,200 | $69,100 | $73,300 |
| Year 20 (Step 20) | $64,500 | $68,800 | $71,700 | $76,200 | $81,000 |
| Year 25 (Step 25) | $69,800 | $74,500 | $77,600 | $82,700 | $88,000 |
National averages based on NEA benchmark data, adjusted for 2025-26 cost-of-living increases.
Use Mode B aboveRepresentative state rows from NEA-style benchmark tables. On mobile, swipe horizontally to compare starting salary, top salary, and local notes.
| State | Starting Salary | Top Salary | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| California | $49,933 | $99,912 | Highest top salary in US |
| New York | $47,618 | $94,795 | Strong union, high ceiling |
| New Jersey | $54,053 | $93,932 | Highest starting salary |
| Connecticut | $47,477 | $95,823 | Top-3 highest ceiling |
| Massachusetts | $48,372 | $95,147 | Strong benefits package |
| Washington | $51,040 | $98,792 | 2nd highest top salary |
| Maryland | $48,510 | $95,142 | DC metro premium |
| Illinois | $41,228 | $84,146 | Wide range by district |
| Texas | $44,527 | $63,673 | No state income tax |
| Florida | $44,040 | $66,405 | Growing demand |
| Georgia | $38,692 | $80,262 | Below-avg starting |
| North Carolina | $37,127 | $63,359 | Teacher shortage state |
| Arizona | $40,554 | $68,910 | Post-Red for Ed gains |
| Missouri | $33,234 | $56,552 | Lowest starting in US |
| Montana | $32,495 | $65,785 | Lowest starting salary |
| Alaska | $49,907 | $88,247 | High cost-of-living adjustment |
| Hawaii | $50,123 | $91,948 | Island premium |
| D.C. | $56,313 | $116,408 | Highest starting in US |
| Federal | $54,311 | $130,622 | DoD schools, highest ceiling |
| Ohio | $38,231 | $82,236 | Pension-heavy comp |
Source: NEA Teacher Salary Benchmarks. Calculate your take-home pay in your state.
Public and private school compensation work differently. The right move depends on whether your pay is schedule-based or market-based.
Most public school salaries are set by district-wide salary schedules. Individual base pay negotiation is rare, but you can still increase total compensation.
Private schools usually have more flexible compensation: no salary schedule, no union, and more room to negotiate the whole package.
Negotiation tip: research comparable public school salaries in your district and use the pension/benefit gap as a negotiation lever.
These moves are practical levers inside or adjacent to the salary schedule system.
Earning a Master's degree or 30 additional graduate credits moves you to a higher salary lane - typically +$3,000-$8,000/year permanently.
Districts in the same state can vary by $8,000-$20,000/year in starting salary. A district move can beat several years of step increases.
Department head, instructional coach, curriculum coordinator, or after-school director roles add $2,000-$8,000/year in stipends.
Adding a STEM, Special Education, or Bilingual endorsement can unlock $2,000-$10,000 in signing bonuses in shortage districts.
Federal school teachers have a top salary of $130,622. D.C. public schools start at $56,313, the highest starting salary of any state.
Short answers for teachers trying to interpret salary schedules, step increases, lane changes, and state pay gaps.
The national average teacher salary is about $46,590/year ($22.40/hr) in ZipRecruiter salary data. The BLS reports a median of $62,340 for experienced elementary school teachers in full-time public school positions. The gap reflects the inclusion of substitute and part-time teachers in the ZipRecruiter figure.
A step increase is an automatic annual raise tied to years of service in a district - typically +$800-$2,000 per step, or 1.5-3% of salary. Most salary schedules have 20-30 steps. Step increases are not negotiated; they happen automatically each year you remain in the district.
Moving from a BA lane to an MA lane on a salary schedule typically adds $3,000-$8,000/year permanently. In high-paying states like California or New York, the MA premium can exceed $10,000/year. This is the highest-ROI single action most public school teachers can take.
It keeps pace with the 2026 inflation rate (~3%) but delivers almost no real purchasing power gain. NEA data shows that after inflation, many teachers' real wages have been flat or declining since 2020. A 3% raise is the median - not a win.
By starting salary: Washington D.C. ($56,313) and New Jersey ($54,053). By top salary ceiling: Federal/DoD schools ($130,622), D.C. ($116,408), and California ($99,912). By overall average, California, Washington, and Connecticut consistently rank in the top 5.
Find your current step and lane on your district's salary schedule. Subtract your current salary from next year's step salary. Or use Mode B of the calculator above - enter your current step, lane, and whether you are completing a lane change this year.
Base salary is set by the district salary schedule and is not individually negotiable. However, you can increase your pay by completing a lane change, applying for stipend positions, moving to a higher-paying district, or targeting shortage subject endorsements. Private school teachers have more flexibility to negotiate directly.
Move from schedule math into gross raise, take-home pay, and broader benchmark tools.
Calculate your gross raise across all pay periods.
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See how much of your raise you actually keep after taxes.
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Calculate paraprofessional hourly raises and union contract benchmarks.
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Know your old and new salary? Find your raise percentage instantly.
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Full tax breakdown across all 50 states.
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Is your raise above or below the national average?
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