Total Compensation Calculator

Total compensation includes every form of value an employer provides beyond base salary — bonuses, equity grants, benefits, retirement contributions, and perks. Understanding total comp is essential for evaluating job offers, benchmarking against market data, and communicating the full value of a rewards package to employees. Industry data shows that benefits and perks typically add 30–45% on top of base salary.

Calculate Total Compensation

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Total Compensation

Values are estimates. Equity values fluctuate with market conditions. Benefits costs reflect employer contribution only. Consult your HR department for exact figures.

Components of Total Compensation

ComponentTypical RangeNotes
Base Salary55–70% of total compFixed cash compensation paid regularly
Variable Pay / Bonus5–30% of basePerformance-based; may be individual, team, or company-wide
Equity0–50%+ of baseStock options, RSUs, ESPP; common in tech and executive roles
Benefits$8K–$25K/yrHealth, dental, vision, life, disability insurance
Retirement3–6% match401(k) or 403(b) employer match
PerksVariesWellness stipends, commuter benefits, tuition, meals

Why Total Compensation Matters

Employees who only compare base salaries may undervalue generous benefits packages or overvalue high-base, low-benefit offers. A $90,000 salary with no retirement match and expensive health insurance can be worth less than an $80,000 salary with a 6% 401(k) match, fully paid premiums, and equity grants. Total compensation analysis levels the playing field.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I value stock options versus RSUs?

RSUs have a clear market value on vest date. Stock options require estimating the spread between strike price and current/future price, which introduces uncertainty. For comparison purposes, many analysts use the Black-Scholes value for options and the current share price times number of shares for RSUs, annualized over the vesting schedule.

Should I include benefits I do not use?

Total compensation reflects what the employer provides, not what you consume. If your employer pays $15,000/year for your family health plan even though you rarely visit a doctor, that is still part of your compensation. However, for personal financial planning, focus on the components you actually receive as cash or tangible value.

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