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How to Negotiate Your Salary in 2026: Scripts That Work

The proven process for negotiating a higher salary — whether for a new job offer or a raise at your current company. Includes word-for-word scripts and.

Kike Faúndez
Written by
Founder of CashControlly
Published on 8 min read
Tools8 min read

A 2025 survey found that 73% of employers have room to negotiate initial offers — yet only 37% of job seekers actually do. The average successful negotiation adds $5,000–$15,000 to base salary. Over a 10-year career with 3% annual raises applied to that base, you leave $75,000–$230,000 on the table by not asking.

Before the conversation: market research

Your negotiation leverage comes from data, not emotion. Before any salary discussion:

  • Check Glassdoor, LinkedIn Salary, Levels.fyi (tech), Bureau of Labor Statistics for market data
  • Talk to 3+ people in similar roles (LinkedIn outreach works)
  • Know the company's pay bands if publicly disclosed (some states require this now)
  • Factor in total compensation: base, bonus, equity, benefits, PTO, remote flexibility

Negotiating a new offer: the exact script

When they give you the number: "Thank you — I'm really excited about this role. I was expecting something closer to [X], based on my research into market rates and my experience in [specific skill/achievement]. Is there flexibility there?"

Key principles: always negotiate, always give a specific number (ranges signal your floor), always reference data not personal need, let them respond before talking again.

Negotiating a raise: the annual review approach

The worst time to ask for a raise: at the annual review when budgets are already set. The best time: 2–3 months before, when you can influence budget allocation. The preparation:

  1. Document your accomplishments in dollar terms (revenue generated, costs saved, projects delivered)
  2. Get market data for your current role
  3. Schedule a dedicated meeting — not "do you have a minute?"
  4. Open with your value, then your ask: "Based on [accomplishments] and market data showing $X for this role, I'd like to discuss adjusting my salary to $Y."

When they say no

Ask: "I understand. What would I need to achieve in the next 6 months to get to $X?" This transforms the rejection into a roadmap. Document what they say. Follow it exactly. Ask again in 6 months with the documentation in hand.

The total compensation play
If base salary is truly fixed, negotiate everything else: signing bonus, extra PTO, remote work flexibility, equity acceleration, professional development budget, earlier performance reviews. A $10,000 signing bonus is $10,000 you didn't have. A WFH arrangement saves $200–$500/month in commuting.
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About the author

Kike Faúndez
Kike Faúndez
Founder of CashControlly · Santiago, Chile

Enrique 'Kike' Faúndez is an Information Systems and Management Control Engineer from Universidad de Chile, with master’s degrees in Finance from Universidad de Chile and Industrial Engineering from Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. He has 15+ years of experience in regulated financial services across finance, operations, and digital product development. He founded CashControlly in Santiago, Chile, with the conviction that personal financial control should not be a privilege, but an accessible and well-designed tool.

Credentials
  • Master's in Finance, Universidad de Chile
  • Master's in Industrial Engineering, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
  • Information Systems and Management Control Engineer, Universidad de Chile
  • AI and ITIL certifications
  • 15+ years in regulated financial services
Learn more about the founder

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