Prompt Engineer Salary.
Across 30 U.S. cities.
$140,000
national median salary
$100,000 to $190,000. Last updated April 2026.
Highest Paying
$197,000
San Francisco, CA
Best Purchasing Power
$146,000
San Francisco, CA
Lowest Paying
$121,000
Detroit, MI
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 Prompt Engineer salary in the United States is $140,000 in 2026, with the full range spanning $100,000 at the 25th percentile to $190,000 at the 75th. San Francisco pays the most at $197,000, while San Francisco offers the best purchasing power after cost-of-living adjustments. This is an emerging role where compensation varies widely based on the employer's AI maturity and the scope of work.
Prompt Engineer salary by city
What you should know
This is an emerging role where compensation varies widely based on the employer's AI maturity and the scope of work. Engineers who combine prompting expertise with evaluation methodology, safety testing, and fine tuning skills earn the most. Experience with structured output generation, chain of thought reasoning, and multi agent orchestration drives premium compensation.
Entry level prompt engineers start at $90,000 to $120,000, though the field is new enough that levels are still being defined. Mid level roles earn $130,000 to $170,000. Senior prompt engineers earn $170,000 to $220,000. The career path typically evolves into AI product management, AI safety, or LLM engineering.
Equity is significant at AI companies, adding $20,000 to $80,000+ annually. Bonuses of 10 to 20% are typical. The role is new enough that benefits packages vary considerably. Some companies categorize prompt engineers under research, offering publication support and conference budgets.