Guide8 min read · Feb 2026

How to Ask for a Raise in 2026 (With Scripts That Work)

Most people never ask for a raise. Of those who do, most get one. Here is the complete playbook - timing, scripts, and what to do when they say no.

Key stat

70% of workers who ask for a raise get one. Yet only 37% of workers ask every year. The biggest barrier is not your boss - it is asking.

When to ask

Timing is half the battle. The best moments to ask for a raise:

  • ✓ Before your annual performance review

    Your manager will be thinking about compensation already. Get ahead of the conversation.

  • ✓ After a major win

    Closed a big deal? Launched a successful project? Strike while the impact is fresh.

  • ✓ When you take on new responsibilities

    New scope = new salary. Do not wait 12 months - ask within 30–60 days.

  • ✗ During company layoffs or budget freezes

    Even if deserved, timing will kill it. Wait for a more stable moment.

  • ✗ Immediately after a mistake

    Give it at least 2–3 months. Let the goodwill rebuild first.

How much to ask for

Research before you anchor. Use these benchmarks:

SituationTypical ask
Cost of living / annual raise3–5%
More responsibilities added8–15%
Underpaid vs. market rate10–25%
Competing job offer15–30%
Promotion to new title15–25%

Always research your specific role on Glassdoor, LinkedIn Salary, and Levels.fyi (for tech).

The script: what to say

You do not need to improvise. Use this framework in your meeting:

Word-for-word script

“I wanted to set aside some time to talk about my compensation. Over the past [X months/year], I've [specific achievement or responsibility increase]. Based on market data for [role] in [location], the range is [salary range], and I'd like to discuss moving my salary to [target salary]. I believe this reflects both my contributions and the current market. What's your perspective?”

Then - and this is critical - stop talking. Let your manager respond. Do not fill the silence.

Send a letter first

The most effective strategy is to send a written letter 2–3 days before the meeting. This gives your manager time to prepare, consult HR, and come in ready to discuss - rather than caught off guard.

Generate your letter in 30 seconds

AI writes a personalized, ready-to-send salary negotiation letter. 3 variants, 7 languages, free.

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If they say no

A no is rarely permanent. Ask these exact questions:

  • "What would it take to get to [target salary]?"
  • "Can we set a specific review date - say, 3 months from now?"
  • "Is there a performance target I can hit that would unlock this increase?"

Then follow up with a counter-offer letter summarizing the agreed-upon path. Our generator has a dedicated Counter-offer variant for exactly this situation.