The Number
A VP of Finance in Miami earns a median of $233,000 in 2026. The working range runs from $188,000 at the 25th percentile to $287,000 at the 75th, with top-decile operators clearing $356,000.
For calibration: BLS pegs the national median for Financial Managers (SOC 11-3031) at $166,570, spanning $94,310 to $323,270 across 841,710 jobholders. VP-level finance leadership prices above the blended financial-manager SOC median.
Miami pays a 12% premium over the national market. Note the $168,000 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.
- Industry accounting complexity. Multi-entity, rev-rec-heavy, or regulated businesses (SaaS, healthcare, fintech) pay for specialized fluency.
- CFO-track vs. controller-track. A VP Finance who owns strategy, capital, and investor prep prices toward the CFO band; one who owns close and compliance prices toward the controller band. Same title on both doors.
- Fundraising exposure. Companies within 18 months of a raise or exit pay a war-time premium for finance leadership that has done it before.
- Public-company proximity. SOX, audit committees, and earnings-cycle experience add a durable 10β15% to the band, because the supply of people who have it is genuinely short.
The evidence for how much these levers matter is in the federal data itself: BLS shows a $228,960 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 Miami specifically, the buyers are financial services, crypto and fintech, trade and logistics and hospitality β think Citadel, Royal Caribbean and Kaseya. Post-2021 finance migration built a real executive market almost overnight, with no state income tax sweetening every offer.
Skills That Pay More
From the O*NET profile for Financial Managers (SOC 11-3031), these are the skills that actually move the offer β with the reasons hiring committees pay up for them.
- Systems and close discipline
- Cutting the close from 15 days to 5 is a visible, permanent win. ERP migration survivors carry a durable market premium.
- Business partnering
- The VPs who out-earn their band are the ones operators actually call before decisions. Finance that shapes the decision beats finance that reports it.
- FP&A leadership
- The board sees the company through your model. VPs whose forecasts hold up under diligence become CFO candidates β and get paid like it preemptively.
- Judgment and decision making
- O*NET's top-ranked skill for financial managers. Finance VPs are paid to say no with a model behind it.
- Capital markets readiness
- Having taken a company through a raise, a debt facility, or an audit-committee cycle is the premium credential. It's scar tissue you can invoice.
In a market anchored by financial services and crypto 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.
- Establish whether the CFO seat is real. 'VP Finance, CFO in 24 months' is worth taking below market once β with the milestone in writing. Without it, price the job as terminal.
- Use the audit as leverage. If you're walking into a first audit, a systems migration, or a raise, you are the insurance policy β price the premium the way an underwriter would.
- Negotiate equity like the investor you talk to. You'll see the cap table anyway; ask for it before you sign, and price your grant off the preference stack, not the option count.
- Anchor against the cost of a failed hire. A bad finance leader found by the auditors costs 10x your ask. CFOs and CEOs both know it; remind them politely.
And remember the Miami context: post-2021 finance migration built a real executive market almost overnight, with no state income tax sweetening every offer. The strongest negotiators here anchor on that reality, not on a national percentile chart. Aim above $233,000 with evidence, or don't aim at all.
Related Roles in Miami
Comp decisions are comparative. Before you anchor on this number, look at the adjacent seats β the roles VP Finances get traded against in Miami, and what this same seat pays one market over.
From the Playbook
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Get the Weekly Breakdown βSources: Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS (May 2025 national data, SOC 11-3031 β Financial Managers); skills curated from the O*NET occupational profile; local adjustment via Miami market index. Figures refresh from the live Boss Playbook salary API where coverage exists.