Boss Playbook Β· 2026 Compensation Data

What Does a General Manager Make in Kansas City? The 2026 Answer

Median Β· Kansas City $137,000
25th–75th percentile $105,000–$181,000
Top decile $248,000

The Number

A General Manager in Kansas City earns a median of $137,000 in 2026. The working range runs from $105,000 at the 25th percentile to $181,000 at the 75th, with top-decile operators clearing $248,000.

The federal baseline: BLS reports $105,770 median nationally for General and Operations Managers (SOC 11-1021), with a $50,090–$253,390 percentile spread across 3,503,020 positions. BLS 11-1021 blends retail shift GMs with business-unit GMs running nine-figure P&Ls; Boss Playbook figures reflect the latter.

Kansas City prices the role about 13% under the national market, and the spread between the 25th and 90th percentile is $143,000 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.

  • Headcount and span. Direct control of 200+ people signals an operator, not an administrator β€” and it prices accordingly.
  • Industry margin structure. GMs in software and financial services out-earn GMs in distribution and hospitality because the margin they manage is worth more per point.
  • Scope of P&L. A GM running a $30M business unit and a GM running a $500M one share a title and nothing else. Revenue responsibility is the first number a comp committee looks at.
  • Stage of company. Private-equity-backed operators trade base for equity and an exit multiple; public-company GMs get predictable cash and RSUs. Same title, very different risk curves.

Don't take it on faith β€” the BLS percentile spread for this SOC is $203,300 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 logistics and rail, fintech and engineering services. A logistics crossroads with a stable enterprise base β€” comp runs midwestern but executive tenure runs long. In practice, fewer seats, longer tenures: openings command genuine competition β€” factor that into how hard you push.

Skills That Pay More

O*NET's occupational profile for SOC 11-1021 lists dozens of competencies. These are the ones with pricing power.

Negotiation
Commercial negotiation shows up in the number directly. GMs who close enterprise deals or renegotiate supply carry a revenue-linked bonus that others don't.
P&L management
Owning the full income statement β€” not a cost center β€” is the single biggest comp separator for GMs. A GM who has grown EBITDA gets paid on results, not tenure.
Judgment and decision making
O*NET ranks it top for the SOC, and comp committees agree: GMs are paid for the calls nobody above them wants to make.
Operations analysis
GMs who can find margin in the operating model β€” pricing, capacity, vendor terms β€” justify their own premium within a quarter.
Talent development
A GM who exports leaders to the rest of the company becomes strategically expensive to lose. Retention grants follow.

Given that fewer seats, longer tenures: openings command genuine competition, 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. If it's PE-backed, model the equity at the sponsor's target multiple and at 1x. Take the job only if the 1x case still works for you.
  2. Anchor on scope, not salary. Get the P&L size, headcount, and growth mandate on the table first β€” then let the number follow from what the business is worth.
  3. Negotiate the bonus mechanics harder than the base. A 40% target bonus with soft triggers beats a 25% bonus with hard ones. Ask exactly how last year's plan paid out β€” if they dodge, that's your answer.
  4. Price the downside. GM roles get restructured. A 12-month severance with accelerated vesting costs them nothing today and protects you from a strategy change you don't control.

One local note: fewer seats, longer tenures: openings command genuine competition. Price your leverage accordingly β€” the market in Kansas City rewards candidates who know exactly which scarce thing they are.

Related Roles in Kansas City

Comp decisions are comparative. Before you anchor on this number, look at the adjacent seats β€” the roles GMs get traded against in Kansas City, 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 11-1021 β€” General and Operations Managers); skills curated from the O*NET occupational profile; local adjustment via Kansas City market index. Figures refresh from the live Boss Playbook salary API where coverage exists.