The Number
A Software Engineering Manager in Kansas City earns a median of $171,000 in 2026. The working range runs from $141,000 at the 25th percentile to $207,000 at the 75th, with top-decile operators clearing $251,000.
For calibration: BLS pegs the national median for Architectural and Engineering Managers (SOC 11-9041) at $171,270, spanning $120,810 to $262,760 across 220,260 jobholders. Blended anchor: 11-9041 management band cross-checked against 15-1252 (Software Developers) senior-IC overlap.
Kansas City prices the role about 13% under the national market. Note the $110,000 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.
- Level inflation. One company's 'manager' is another's 'director.' Ignore the title; price the level by team size, scope, and reporting line.
- Big-tech vs. everyone else. FAANG-tier SEM total comp can double the local market via equity; the base salary gap is much smaller. Which market you're in matters more than which city.
- Team criticality. Managing the payments platform pays more than managing internal tools at the same company β accountability is priced, not headcount.
- IC-manager pendulum. Managers who can credibly return to staff-IC roles hold the strongest BATNA in tech and negotiate accordingly.
The evidence for how much these levers matter is in the federal data itself: BLS shows a $141,950 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 Kansas City specifically, the buyers are logistics and rail, fintech and engineering services β think Cerner (Oracle Health), Garmin and Burns & McDonnell. A logistics crossroads with a stable enterprise base β comp runs midwestern but executive tenure runs long.
Skills That Pay More
From the O*NET profile for Architectural and Engineering Managers (SOC 11-9041), these are the skills that actually move the offer β with the reasons hiring committees pay up for them.
- Project and delivery management
- O*NET staples for the SOC. Predictable delivery is the currency managers trade for autonomy and comp.
- Recruiting and closing
- In tight markets the manager IS the closing pitch. A manager with a strong close rate is a revenue asset to the recruiting org.
- Incident leadership
- Calm command of a sev-1 is where reputations are minted. On-call orgs price this into retention grants explicitly.
- Technical credibility
- Managers who can still read the diff get better information from their teams and better offers from the market. The role prices technical depth even when the job stops using it daily.
- Performance management
- The genuinely scarce skill. Managers who handle underperformance early β humanely and fast β save the org its most expensive failure mode, and strong VPs pay to keep them.
In a market anchored by logistics and rail and fintech, 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.
- Negotiate level before salary. An M1 offer at M2 scope is the oldest trick in tech comp β a leveling correction is worth more than any sign-on you'd extract.
- Use the IC option openly. 'I can take a staff role at equal pay with less overhead' is the most honest leverage in the industry. Use it while it's true.
- Ask about the refresh cliff. Many companies' initial grants decay after year two; the refresh policy determines whether year-three comp grows or quietly collapses.
- Get team charter and on-call load in writing. A hidden 24/7 rotation is a 15% pay cut you discover after you've signed.
And remember the Kansas City context: a logistics crossroads with a stable enterprise base β comp runs midwestern but executive tenure runs long. The strongest negotiators here anchor on that reality, not on a national percentile chart. Aim above $171,000 with evidence, or don't aim at all.
Related Roles in Kansas City
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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Get the Weekly Breakdown βSources: Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS (May 2025 national data, SOC 11-9041 β Architectural and Engineering 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.