Boss Playbook Β· 2026 Compensation Data

What Does a VP of Engineering Make in Minneapolis? The 2026 Answer

Median Β· Minneapolis $243,000
25th–75th percentile $194,000–$296,000
Top decile $359,000

The Number

Median VP of Engineering pay in Minneapolis sits at $243,000 for 2026. The realistic negotiating band is $194,000 to $296,000, and $359,000 is where the 90th percentile starts β€” not where fantasy begins.

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. SOC 11-9041 spans all engineering management; software VPs at venture-scale companies price above the anchor.

Minneapolis pays a 5% premium over the national market. Note the $165,000 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

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

  • Equity stage. Series B VPs take 0.5–1.5% and below-market cash; late-stage and public VPs flip that ratio. The title hides a 2x total-comp spread.
  • Platform vs. product ownership. VPs who own infrastructure and security carry pager-duty-grade accountability, and the market prices that risk in.
  • Proximity to revenue. Engineering orgs that ship the product customers pay for out-earn internal-tools orgs at the same headcount.
  • Team scale. Comp scales in steps: ~30 engineers, ~80, 150+. Each threshold is a different job and a different pay band.

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 Minneapolis specifically, the buyers are retail, medical devices and food and agriculture β€” think Target, UnitedHealth and Medtronic. A dense Fortune 500 cluster pays solid enterprise comp and promotes from within β€” external offers must beat real internal ladders.

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.

Vendor and cloud economics
Cutting seven figures of cloud spend pays for the VP several times over β€” and every CFO knows it.
Engineering org design
Companies pay a premium for VPs who have scaled a team through a doubling β€” twice. Org design failures are the most expensive mistakes in tech.
Systems evaluation
O*NET's top-ranked skill for the SOC. Translating architecture risk into board language is what separates a VP from a very senior manager.
Hiring and calibration
A VP who raises the hiring bar changes the cost curve of the whole department. That skill compounds and comp follows it.
Delivery management
Predictable shipping against a roadmap is rarer than it should be. VPs with a reputation for it command retention packages.

In a market anchored by retail and medical devices, lead with the ones that map to the local buyer's problem.

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. Trade cash for equity only with information: current preferred price, option strike, last 409A, and the preference stack. A VP who won't ask is telling them something.
  2. Get the CTO relationship defined before you sign β€” who owns architecture, who owns headcount. Ambiguity there is how VPs get layered a year in.
  3. Never negotiate a VP Eng offer on base alone. The refresh grant policy matters more than the initial grant by year three β€” ask for it in writing.
  4. Ask how many engineers the plan assumes in 18 months. If they say double, you're being hired to build a bigger org than you're being paid for. Reprice.

And remember the Minneapolis context: a dense Fortune 500 cluster pays solid enterprise comp and promotes from within β€” external offers must beat real internal ladders. The strongest negotiators here anchor on that reality, not on a national percentile chart. Aim above $243,000 with evidence, or don't aim at all.

Related Roles in Minneapolis

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 11-9041 β€” Architectural and Engineering Managers); skills curated from the O*NET occupational profile; local adjustment via Minneapolis market index. Figures refresh from the live Boss Playbook salary API where coverage exists.