Boss Playbook Β· 2026 Compensation Data

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

Median Β· San Francisco $383,000
25th–75th percentile $298,000–$493,000
Top decile $643,000

The Number

A Chief Technology Officer in San Francisco earns a median of $383,000 in 2026. The working range runs from $298,000 at the 25th percentile to $493,000 at the 75th, with top-decile operators clearing $643,000.

For calibration: BLS pegs the national median for Chief Executives (SOC 11-1011) at $213,990, spanning $75,700 to $507,730 across 204,350 jobholders. Anchored to the C-suite SOC; cash figures exclude equity, which at venture-backed companies routinely exceeds salary.

San Francisco pays a 55% premium over the national market. Note the $345,000 gap between the 25th and 90th percentiles β€” that gap is scope, industry and negotiation, and every dollar of it is contestable.

What Moves It

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

  • Public-company exposure. SEC-reporting CTOs carry disclosure and audit liability, and their packages carry the loading for it.
  • 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.

The evidence for how much these levers matter is in the federal data itself: BLS shows a $432,030 spread between the 10th and 90th percentile for this occupation nationally. That's not noise β€” it's scope, industry and stage being priced in real offers.

In San Francisco specifically, the buyers are venture-backed software, AI research and fintech β€” think Salesforce, OpenAI and Stripe. The most equity-saturated executive market in the country β€” cash comp is only half the conversation here.

Skills That Pay More

From the O*NET profile for Chief Executives (SOC 11-1011), these are the skills that actually move the offer β€” with the reasons hiring committees pay up for them.

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.
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.

In a market anchored by venture-backed software and AI research, lead with the ones that map to the local buyer's problem.

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. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. Double-trigger acceleration is non-negotiable. A CTO is the first casualty of an acquirer with its own technology leadership.
  4. 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.

And remember the San Francisco context: the most equity-saturated executive market in the country β€” cash comp is only half the conversation here. The strongest negotiators here anchor on that reality, not on a national percentile chart. Aim above $383,000 with evidence, or don't aim at all.

Related Roles in San Francisco

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 11-1011 β€” Chief Executives); skills curated from the O*NET occupational profile; local adjustment via San Francisco market index. Figures refresh from the live Boss Playbook salary API where coverage exists.