Project your salary growth over your entire career. See year-by-year earnings, cumulative lifetime earnings, and the impact of growth rate.
Your starting salary is just the beginning. What matters most for lifetime wealth is your salary growth rate — the compound annual increase in your earnings over decades of work. Even a small difference in growth rate (3% vs 5%) produces dramatically different career outcomes over 30–40 years.
This calculator projects your salary year by year, showing how your earnings grow from entry-level to peak-career, and computes your total lifetime earnings. It reveals the extraordinary power of compound growth: a $50,000 starting salary with 5% annual growth reaches $216,000 after 30 years and generates $3.3 million in cumulative career earnings.
Use this tool in career planning to visualize different trajectories, evaluate the impact of promotions and career moves, and understand why negotiating higher growth (through skills, job changes, and promotions) matters more than a slightly higher starting salary.
Students, parents, and educators all gain valuable perspective from precise career salary growth data when planning academic paths, managing workloads, or setting realistic performance goals. Return to this calculator each semester or grading period to stay on top of evolving academic targets.
Most people focus on starting salary, but growth rate is the real wealth driver. A 2% vs 5% growth difference on a $50K salary produces a $2M gap over 30 years. This calculator shows you exactly how growth rate compounds, motivating you to invest in skills and career moves that accelerate growth.
Salary at Year n = Starting Salary × (1 + Growth Rate)^n Lifetime Earnings = Σ Starting Salary × (1 + Growth)^i, for i = 0 to career years
Result: $3.33M lifetime earnings
Starting at $50,000 with 5% annual growth: Year 10 = $81,445; Year 20 = $132,665; Year 30 = $216,097. Cumulative lifetime earnings over 30 years total approximately $3.33 million. At 3% growth, the same starting salary produces only $2.38M lifetime.
Salary compounding works just like investment compounding. At 5% growth, your salary doubles every ~14 years. At 7%, every ~10 years. This means starting at $50K, you could be at $100K by your mid-30s and $200K by your late 40s — without extraordinary career moves, just consistent above-average performance.
The most reliable ways to accelerate salary growth: (1) Strategic job changes for 15–30% raises every 2–3 years in early career, (2) Skill development in high-demand areas, (3) Moving to higher-paying geographies or industries, (4) Building management or specialized technical expertise. Each of these can add 1–3% to your effective long-term growth rate.
Most careers follow an S-curve: slow growth early (learning), rapid growth mid-career (contributing and advancing), and plateau or slight growth late career (maintenance). Your timing strategy matters: maximize moves and skill development during the rapid growth phase (years 5–20) when they compound the most.
Average annual raises are 3–4% in most industries. High performers may see 5–7%. Early-career growth is typically faster (5–10% including promotions), while late-career growth slows to 2–3%. Job changers see the biggest percentage increases.
Inflation averages 2–3% per year. A 4% raise when inflation is 3% means only 1% real growth. For meaningful wealth building, target growth rates that exceed inflation by 2–3 percentage points.
Not necessarily. Career disruptions (layoffs, industry downturns, career changes) can reduce salary temporarily. However, over a 30-year career, the overall trend is upward for most professionals who invest in their skills.
Promotions create step-function salary increases (e.g., 15–25% jump) rather than steady growth. These are captured in the average growth rate. If you expect 3 major promotions over 20 years, your effective annual growth rate might average 5–7%.
If bonuses and equity are consistent parts of your compensation, include them in total compensation growth. Be conservative with equity estimates as they depend on company performance and vesting schedules.
Over a long career, growth rate dominates. A $40K start with 6% growth surpasses a $60K start with 3% growth by year 17 and produces significantly higher lifetime earnings. However, starting salary matters more in the short term.