Most people accept the first number. The people who negotiate almost always get more — not because employers expect to be pushed back on, but because most employers build in negotiation room. Not negotiating is leaving money on the table that was set aside for you.

This doesn't mean negotiating aggressively or awkwardly. Done well, it's a professional conversation that most hiring managers expect and respect.

When and when not to negotiate

The right time: After you have a verbal offer in hand. Not during the interview process — answering salary questions during an interview is different from negotiating an actual offer. Wait until they've told you they want you.

Don't negotiate: The moment the offer is made verbally. Ask for time to review the written offer. This gives you the space to think, research, and prepare a counter without doing it in a pressured live moment.

Don't negotiate against yourself: Don't offer a lower number because you fear rejection. If the offer is below your expectation, say so professionally and make a counter. The worst they can say is no.

Know your walk-away number. Before you negotiate, decide what minimum you'd accept. This stops you from accepting something you'd regret under pressure.

Research salary benchmarks first

Negotiation without data is just wishful thinking. Before countering, find out what the market pays for this role, at this level, in this location:

With a range in hand, you can counter from a position of information rather than opinion.

What to negotiate beyond salary

If the base salary is fixed (common in public sector, structured grades, or companies with strict bands), there is often flexibility elsewhere:

Word-for-word negotiation scripts

Counter-offer by email (recommended)

Email Script

"Thank you for the offer — I'm genuinely excited about the role and the team, and I'd love to make this work.

I've been reviewing the offer and doing some research on current market rates for this role in [location/sector]. Based on that research and my [X years of experience / specific skill set], I was hoping we could discuss a base salary of [your target number]. I want to be transparent that this is based on market data and not a tactic — I think the role is a great fit and I want to join.

Would you be able to revisit the base salary figure? I'm flexible on [start date / other element] if that helps."

Counter-offer by phone

Phone Script

"I really appreciate the offer and I'm very interested in joining. I've done some thinking and research since we spoke, and I wanted to have an honest conversation about the compensation. The base salary is slightly below what I was expecting based on my understanding of market rates for this type of role — I was hoping we might be able to get closer to [target]. Is there any room to move on the base?"

[Pause. Let them respond. Don't fill silence with concessions.]

Prepare for the salary conversation in the interview too
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Frequently asked questions

Will negotiating make them rescind the offer?
Very rarely, and almost never if done professionally. An employer who rescinds an offer because a candidate asked a reasonable question about compensation has revealed something important about their culture. A polite, reasoned counter-offer is almost universally respected — hiring is expensive, and no sensible employer walks away from a good candidate over a reasonable negotiation.
What if they say the salary is fixed?
Accept that at face value and pivot to other elements. "I understand — is there any flexibility on [signing bonus / additional leave / review timeline]?" A "no" on salary doesn't mean a "no" on everything. In structured organisations with pay bands, the base often genuinely is fixed, but one-off elements like signing bonuses or earlier review dates sometimes aren't.
How long should I take to respond to an offer?
Twenty-four to forty-eight hours is standard and expected. If you need longer — for example, you're waiting on another offer — it's fine to say so professionally: "I have another process in flight and want to be transparent. Could I have until [specific date] to give you a definitive answer?" Most employers would rather wait a few days than lose a good candidate.