Boss Playbook Β· 2026 Compensation Data

What Does a Chief Technology Officer Make in Phoenix? The 2026 Answer

Median Β· Phoenix $242,000
25th–75th percentile $188,000–$312,000
Top decile $407,000

The Number

A Chief Technology Officer in Phoenix earns a median of $242,000 in 2026. The working range runs from $188,000 at the 25th percentile to $312,000 at the 75th, with top-decile operators clearing $407,000.

The federal baseline: BLS reports $213,990 median nationally for Chief Executives (SOC 11-1011), with a $75,700–$507,730 percentile spread across 204,350 positions. Anchored to the C-suite SOC; cash figures exclude equity, which at venture-backed companies routinely exceeds salary.

Phoenix pays this role almost exactly at the national line, and the spread between the 25th and 90th percentile is $219,000 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

Four variables move this number more than anything on your resume.

  • Cash-equity mix. The BLS spread for chief executives β€” $75,700 at the 10th percentile to $507,730 at the 90th β€” is the widest of any occupation on this site, and equity is why. Startup CTOs deliberately sit low on cash.
  • Founder vs. hired. A founding CTO holds 10–40x the equity of a hired one and often takes less salary. Comparing the two on base is meaningless.
  • Company revenue. Sub-$10M companies pay CTO cash in the low $200s; $100M+ companies clear $350–450k before equity.
  • Public-company exposure. SEC-reporting CTOs carry disclosure and audit liability, and their packages carry the loading for it.

Don't take it on faith β€” the BLS percentile spread for this SOC is $432,030 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 semiconductors, financial back-office and healthcare. The TSMC buildout is pulling advanced-manufacturing leadership into the valley at pay bands the metro has never seen before. In practice, semiconductor scaling has created acute demand for operations executives β€” factor that into how hard you push.

Skills That Pay More

O*NET's occupational profile for SOC 11-1011 lists dozens of competencies. These are the ones with pricing power.

Complex problem solving
Top of the O*NET profile for chief executives β€” and for CTOs it's existential. You're the last escalation point in the company.
Capital allocation for technology
Build vs. buy vs. partner decisions move eight-figure budgets. CTOs who frame them in ROIC terms get treated β€” and paid β€” like officers, not engineers.
Board and investor communication
A CTO who can survive a technical due-diligence grilling raises the company's valuation. That skill shows up in your equity, not your base.
Security and risk governance
Post-breach, the market repriced this permanently. CTOs who own risk credibly earn a resilience premium.
Technical strategy
Boards pay CTOs to be right about a three-year technology bet. One correct platform call is worth more than a decade of competent management.

Given that semiconductor scaling has created acute demand for operations executives, the skills above aren't a checklist β€” they're your differentiation story.

How to Negotiate This Number

Nobody at this level should be negotiating from a listicle. But after thirty years of watching offers get made and broken, these are the moves that hold up.

  1. Price your equity against the next round, not the last one. Ask for the cap table math that gets you to a specific dollar outcome at the company's own target valuation.
  2. Double-trigger acceleration is non-negotiable. A CTO is the first casualty of an acquirer with its own technology leadership.
  3. If they balk on cash, take board exposure instead β€” present at every meeting, own a standing agenda item. Visibility at the board level is the comp negotiation for your next role.
  4. Negotiate like an officer: employment agreement, not offer letter. Severance, change-of-control acceleration, and D&O coverage are standard at this level β€” asking for them signals you've been here before.

One local note: semiconductor scaling has created acute demand for operations executives. Price your leverage accordingly β€” the market in Phoenix rewards candidates who know exactly which scarce thing they are.

Related Roles in Phoenix

Comp decisions are comparative. Before you anchor on this number, look at the adjacent seats β€” the roles CTOs get traded against in Phoenix, and what this same seat pays one market over.

From the Playbook

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Sources: Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS (May 2025 national data, SOC 11-1011 β€” Chief Executives); skills curated from the O*NET occupational profile; local adjustment via Phoenix market index. Figures refresh from the live Boss Playbook salary API where coverage exists.