Multimodal AI Researcher Salary.
Across 30 U.S. cities.
$202,000
national median salary
$150,000 to $268,000. Last updated April 2026.
Highest Paying
$284,000
San Jose, CA
Best Purchasing Power
$210,000
Miami, FL
Lowest Paying
$151,000
Charleston, WV
Salary data sourced from SEC filings, H-1B Labor Condition Applications (DOL), Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics, and aggregated job postings across 50+ platforms. Ranges reflect 25th to 75th percentile for full-time positions. Cost-of-living adjustments use Bureau of Economic Analysis Regional Price Parities (2025 index). Last updated April 2026.
The average Multimodal AI Researcher salary in the United States is $202,000 in 2026, with the full range spanning $150,000 at the 25th percentile to $268,000 at the 75th. San Jose pays the most at $284,000, while Miami offers the best purchasing power after cost-of-living adjustments. Multimodal AI is one of the fastest-growing research areas, and researchers who can bridge vision, language, and audio modalities are exceptionally scarce.
Multimodal AI Researcher salary by city
What you should know
Multimodal AI is one of the fastest-growing research areas, and researchers who can bridge vision, language, and audio modalities are exceptionally scarce. Experience building or fine-tuning models like GPT-4V or Gemini-class systems carries a 20 to 35% premium. Publication at top venues and demonstrated production deployment both significantly increase compensation.
Entry-level multimodal researchers earn $150,000 to $185,000 with a PhD. Mid-level researchers with 2 to 4 years reach $205,000 to $270,000. Senior staff researchers earn $290,000 to $400,000, and research leads at major labs can reach $450,000 to $600,000 in base compensation.
Frontier AI labs offer total compensation packages of $350,000 to $600,000 for experienced multimodal researchers. Equity grants are typically refreshed annually, and many companies provide $10,000 to $30,000 in annual compute credits for personal research projects.