Veteran Guide

Salary Negotiation for Veterans

Military pay charts don't translate to civilian salaries. Here's how to find your real number and negotiate it without leaving money on the table.

Negotiating pay can feel awkward after years on a fixed military pay scale where the number wasn't up for discussion. In the civilian world it almost always is — and employers expect a counter. Not negotiating can cost you tens of thousands over a career. Here's how to research, anchor, and ask, professionally.

Forget the pay chart — research the market

Your military compensation (base pay plus tax-advantaged allowances like BAH and BAS) doesn't map cleanly onto a civilian salary, so don't anchor on it. Instead, research the civilian market rate for the role, in that city, at your experience level. Use salary sites, the posting's range if given, and — this is the fastest shortcut — ask a recruiter who places these roles what they actually pay. LockLeed recruiters share real ranges for free.

Know your number before you're asked

Walk in with three figures: your target (what the market supports for a strong candidate), your floor (the least you'll accept), and a reach. When asked about expectations, give a researched range with your target near the bottom of it, or deflect politely to learn their range first: "I'd like to understand the full role and package — what range do you have budgeted?"

Expect to counter — professionally

A first offer is usually not the final offer. When you get one, thank them, ask for it in writing, and take a little time. Then counter once, calmly, anchored to your research: "Based on the market for this role and what I bring, I was targeting X — can we get there?" Stay warm and collaborative; you're negotiating a partnership, not winning a fight.

Negotiate the whole package

Salary is one line. Sign-on bonus, PTO, remote flexibility, title, start date, professional development, and especially health benefits and 401(k) match all carry real value — and are often more flexible than base pay. If they can't move on salary, ask what else is on the table. Value the total package, not just the headline number.

Use your transition benefits as leverage — quietly

Your discipline, clearance (if you hold one), and immediate availability are real value. You don't need to hardball, but you should price yourself as the vetted, low-risk hire you are. Confidence grounded in research reads as professionalism, not arrogance.

Questions

Common Questions

How do I convert my military pay to a civilian salary? +
You don't convert it directly — allowances like BAH and BAS are tax-advantaged and location-based, so a straight conversion misleads. Research the civilian market rate for the specific role and city instead, and treat your military pay as background, not the anchor.
Is it rude to negotiate a job offer? +
No — employers expect it, and most build in room for a counter. A single, professional, research-backed counter is normal and often respected. Declining to negotiate is what leaves money behind.
What if I don't know the market rate? +
Ask someone who does. Recruiters who place the role know the real ranges. LockLeed recruiters will share market ranges for the roles we staff, for free — it costs you nothing to ask before you name a number.
Should I tell them my current or military pay? +
You're not required to, and it's often better to anchor on the market rate for the new role instead. In many places employers can't ask salary history at all. Redirect to the value you bring and the market range.
Your Next Move

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