Comments on: GIS Salary Expectations: Climb the GIS Career Ladder https://gisgeography.com/gis-salary-expectations-gis-career/ Geographic Information Systems Fri, 28 Mar 2025 02:13:02 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 By: GISGeography https://gisgeography.com/gis-salary-expectations-gis-career/#comment-358087 Wed, 27 Nov 2024 12:56:25 +0000 http://gisgeography.com/?p=2633#comment-358087 In reply to Becca.

Hi Becca. Hoping to provide another update in 2025. Thanks for checking in!

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By: Becca https://gisgeography.com/gis-salary-expectations-gis-career/#comment-355571 Sun, 10 Nov 2024 14:59:41 +0000 http://gisgeography.com/?p=2633#comment-355571 When will we see another update? The field has seen some recent changes in the past 2 years regarding responsibilities and salary.

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By: Professional Cartographer https://gisgeography.com/gis-salary-expectations-gis-career/#comment-261736 Wed, 23 Mar 2022 16:58:01 +0000 http://gisgeography.com/?p=2633#comment-261736 Thanks so much for taking my comment under advisement and updating the salaries for this, it’s great to have this resource updated!

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By: GISGeography https://gisgeography.com/gis-salary-expectations-gis-career/#comment-259483 Fri, 11 Feb 2022 16:50:45 +0000 http://gisgeography.com/?p=2633#comment-259483 In reply to Professional Cartographer.

Thanks, I appreciate the heads up. And yes, the salary information was in desperate need of an update. That’s why I updated all salaries and put them all into new tiers.

Most GIS salaries received a bump up in earnings. But strangely, I think the career “geographer” was a bit too high in the last list of salaries. This is the only one that had a significant movement downwards.

Also, I should mention that the “Update for 2022” could be anything related to the post. I don’t have a “changelog” or anything like that in our posts. But the update was related to something different (not salary information). But now, this should be all updated.

Anyways, I hope you enjoy it, and thanks for reading!

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By: Professional Cartographer https://gisgeography.com/gis-salary-expectations-gis-career/#comment-259401 Thu, 10 Feb 2022 21:19:04 +0000 http://gisgeography.com/?p=2633#comment-259401 It’s extremely disappointing that you’re still using the same salary ranges as you were in 2016 (I have that exact same pyramid graphic saved on my computer from that year). While this post was a good source six years ago, I now find it concerning that it is being “updated” for 2022 without actually addressing how salaries have increased since your original publication.

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By: Gary https://gisgeography.com/gis-salary-expectations-gis-career/#comment-95319 Thu, 04 Jun 2020 06:35:34 +0000 http://gisgeography.com/?p=2633#comment-95319 It should be noted the factors behind your salary go beyond your raw technical skill level. It has more to do with the funding source of your organization. For example, if you are working local government the odds are your going to get paid less than in State or Federal due to the relatively small amount of tax revenue they can pull in. That means a GIS Manager job there might be much lower compared to somebody with the Feds or an intelligence organization.

A contractor with the Federal government is a different matter altogether. Let’s say you work with a low overhead small business that’s a prime on a contract. They may pay you much more than you could ever make working even for the Federal Government. On the other hand, if you work for your typical big business as a contractor, you may get just a little more than industry average due to higher overhead. At the end of the day it’s up to what you want: security in one place, or the challenge of moving in different places and getting exposed to different projects. Sometimes if you stick to security you’ll get just that, and a significant pay cut over the years.

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By: Jack https://gisgeography.com/gis-salary-expectations-gis-career/#comment-60852 Thu, 16 Jan 2020 17:39:25 +0000 http://gisgeography.com/?p=2633#comment-60852 I am agree with Roger Cottrell’s opinion.

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By: Petar https://gisgeography.com/gis-salary-expectations-gis-career/#comment-59899 Fri, 10 Jan 2020 13:45:52 +0000 http://gisgeography.com/?p=2633#comment-59899 GIS in archaeology is a great opportunity.

GIS will be the next big thing in archaeology. The future of archaeology will use mainly GIS for mapping the ground and analyze possibilities for future successful excavation.

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By: Karl https://gisgeography.com/gis-salary-expectations-gis-career/#comment-24844 Fri, 09 Nov 2018 19:28:17 +0000 http://gisgeography.com/?p=2633#comment-24844 Has anyone paired GIS with archaeology? There seems to be many developing applications of digital data sets in the field of archaeology (e.g., LiDAR, photogrammetry). I’m wondering if any readers here are applying GIS within the field of archaeology and have any advice on pursuing it.

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By: Jason White https://gisgeography.com/gis-salary-expectations-gis-career/#comment-1911 Fri, 05 May 2017 19:25:32 +0000 http://gisgeography.com/?p=2633#comment-1911 @ Marc The GIS field is a fickle one to say the least. Over the last several years the industry has been saturated with people seeking ways to make their mark in this field. I currently contract for the government; personally enjoy this particular path as I work to finish off my MGIST. For me though, I have over 16 years in the military as an imagery analyst and have the educational backing to secure a salary at the top end of the spectrum. Essentially I can fill the role of an imagery analyst or geospatial analyst; they are cousins in the industry, but quite different in reality.

The private sector is full of opportunities as virtually every company in every industry uses GIS in some shape or form. If money is what you (or anyone) seek; the GIS programming/developing and Geospatial Scientists and Statisticians (those “big data” positions)
tend to pull the higher salaries from what I have seen.

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