Boss Playbook Β· 2026 Compensation Data

What Does a Chief of Staff Make in Boston? The 2026 Answer

Median Β· Boston $199,000
25th–75th percentile $157,000–$249,000
Top decile $314,000

The Number

Median Chief of Staff pay in Boston sits at $199,000 for 2026. The realistic negotiating band is $157,000 to $249,000, and $314,000 is where the 90th percentile starts β€” not where fantasy begins.

The federal baseline: BLS reports $101,860 median nationally for Management Analysts (SOC 13-1111), with a $60,640–$171,640 percentile spread across 898,280 positions. Anchored to the management-analyst SOC per BLS mapping; executive-suite CoS roles price well above the analyst median.

Boston pays a 40% premium over the national market, and the spread between the 25th and 90th percentile is $157,000 β€” which is the real story. Where you land in that spread is negotiable; the median is just the market's opening bid.

What Moves It

Same title, very different paychecks β€” these are the levers that explain the spread.

  • Altitude of the principal. CoS to a public-company CEO is a different labor market than CoS to a division VP β€” the spread between them is routinely 60%.
  • Operator vs. coordinator design. Roles with direct reports and owned initiatives price like directors; calendar-and-decks roles price like senior managers. The title won't tell you which; the org chart will.
  • Tenure expectation. The best CoS roles are explicit two-year rotations into a P&L seat. That promise has cash value β€” and its absence should cost the employer.
  • Company stage. Startup CoS roles trade cash for proximity and equity; enterprise CoS roles pay cash for process discipline.

Don't take it on faith β€” the BLS percentile spread for this SOC is $111,000 from bottom decile to top. A spread that wide is the market telling you the title doesn't set the price; the mandate does.

Locally, the demand side is biotech, enterprise software and asset management. Biotech and academia give Boston an unusually credentialed executive market with pay to match. In practice, life-sciences leadership competes directly with tech for the same operators β€” factor that into how hard you push.

Skills That Pay More

O*NET's occupational profile for SOC 13-1111 lists dozens of competencies. These are the ones with pricing power.

Analytical modeling
The CoS who can build the model β€” not just commission it β€” closes the loop between question and answer in one seat. That speed is the value.
Executive communication
The CoS writes in the CEO's voice. Companies pay for the ones who can compress a 40-slide deck into the one paragraph the board actually reads.
Critical thinking
O*NET's top skill for the SOC. The CoS is paid to pressure-test the principal's thinking before the market does it publicly.
Program orchestration
Running the operating cadence β€” QBRs, planning cycles, leadership offsites β€” is the visible half of the job and the easiest premium to defend.
Discretion and judgment
A CoS sees comp, M&A, and terminations before anyone else. Trust at that level has a price, and good principals pay it willingly.

Given that life-sciences leadership competes directly with tech for the same operators, the skills above aren't a checklist β€” they're your differentiation story.

How to Negotiate This Number

You've been on the other side of this table. So has the person across from you. Skip the scripts β€” here's what actually works at this level.

  1. Price the ambiguity. CoS bands are the softest in the building β€” which means the first number is the most negotiable you'll ever see. Counter with the director band and evidence.
  2. Get equity if the role is startup-side. You'll influence enterprise value with no P&L to point at later; equity is the only instrument that captures that.
  3. Ask who owned this seat before and where they went. Two CoS alumni in operating roles is worth more than $20k of base β€” but take the $20k too.
  4. Negotiate the exit before the entrance. The right ask: 'What operating role does this seat feed into, and when?' A principal who can't answer is offering you a staff job with a nicer title.

One local note: life-sciences leadership competes directly with tech for the same operators. Price your leverage accordingly β€” the market in Boston rewards candidates who know exactly which scarce thing they are.

Related Roles in Boston

Smart operators benchmark sideways, not just upward. Here's how this seat prices against its neighbors β€” same city, different chair, and same chair in a different city.

From the Playbook

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Sources: Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS (May 2025 national data, SOC 13-1111 β€” Management Analysts); skills curated from the O*NET occupational profile; local adjustment via Boston market index. Figures refresh from the live Boss Playbook salary API where coverage exists.