AI Engineer Salary Guide 2026: Roles, Ranges and Trends
AI engineer salary data for 2026 from Glassdoor, Levels.fyi and BLS. Covers ML engineers, data scientists, prompt engineers by experience and location.
On this page
AI engineering remains one of the highest-paid specialisations in technology. Demand has not softened despite broader tech layoffs — companies across industries are competing for engineers who can build, deploy, and maintain AI systems. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the median base salary for AI-related engineering roles is approximately $145,000, while Levels.fyi data from over 9,500 self-reported profiles shows an average total compensation of $293,000 — reflecting the significant equity and bonus components at major tech companies.
The spread between data sources is worth understanding upfront. Glassdoor reports an average of approximately $141,000 base salary for AI engineers in the US (April 2026). Built In reports approximately $185,000. Levels.fyi skews toward Big Tech compensation packages that include substantial equity. The “true” average depends heavily on company size, location, and what you count as compensation.
This guide uses data from multiple sources to provide a realistic picture of what AI engineers actually earn across different roles, experience levels, locations, and industries.
Note: Salary figures cited are drawn from Glassdoor, Levels.fyi, Built In, and BLS data as of early 2026. Individual compensation varies based on company, negotiation, and market conditions. This guide is informational and does not constitute career advice.
Salary Ranges by Role
AI engineering is not a single job. The title covers distinct roles with different skill requirements and compensation levels.
| Role | Median Base Salary (US) | Total Compensation Range | Key Skills |
|---|---|---|---|
| AI/ML Engineer | $155,000-180,000 | $180,000-350,000+ | Python, TensorFlow/PyTorch, MLOps, model deployment |
| Data Scientist | $130,000-160,000 | $150,000-280,000+ | Statistics, SQL, Python, data modelling, experimentation |
| Generative AI Engineer | $165,000-200,000 | $200,000-400,000+ | LLM fine-tuning, RAG pipelines, prompt engineering, guardrails |
| AI Research Scientist | $170,000-220,000 | $220,000-500,000+ | PhD-level research, paper publication, novel architecture design |
| MLOps Engineer | $140,000-175,000 | $170,000-300,000+ | Infrastructure, CI/CD for ML, model monitoring, Kubernetes |
| AI Product Manager | $150,000-185,000 | $180,000-320,000+ | Product strategy, stakeholder management, AI capability understanding |
| Prompt Engineer | $100,000-140,000 | $120,000-200,000 | LLM prompting, evaluation, content strategy, testing |
Sources: Built In (2026), Glassdoor (April 2026), Levels.fyi (Q1 2026), KORE1 placement data.
Generative AI engineers — those working specifically with large language models, retrieval-augmented generation, and AI application development — command the highest premiums among non-research roles. The demand surge for these skills has not yet been matched by supply, keeping compensation elevated.
Prompt engineering has become a less distinct role in 2026 compared to 2024. Many organisations have folded prompt engineering responsibilities into existing AI engineering or product roles rather than hiring dedicated prompt engineers. The standalone salary range for this title has compressed accordingly.
Salary by Experience Level
Experience is the single largest driver of AI compensation, and the curve is steeper than in most engineering disciplines.
| Experience Level | Base Salary Range (US) | Total Compensation Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Entry-level (0-2 years) | $90,000-135,000 | $100,000-173,000 | Often requires MS degree; PhD preferred at research labs |
| Mid-level (3-5 years) | $140,000-200,000 | $180,000-280,000 | Strongest YoY growth in 2026 (~9.2% increase) |
| Senior (6-10 years) | $175,000-250,000 | $250,000-400,000 | Premium for production ML experience, not just research |
| Staff/Principal (10+ years) | $200,000-300,000+ | $350,000-700,000+ | Top packages at FAANG exceed $500K total compensation |
Sources: Levels.fyi (Q1 2026), KORE1 placement data, Exceeds AI analysis.
A notable data point: mid-level AI engineers saw the strongest salary growth in 2025-2026 at approximately 9.2% year-over-year. Companies are particularly aggressive in hiring engineers with 3-5 years of hands-on ML experience who can build production systems — not just prototype models. This experience bracket is where demand most exceeds supply.
At the senior and staff levels, compensation at major technology companies is exceptional. Google’s AI Engineer total compensation ranges from $185,000 at L3 (entry) to $583,000 at L6 (staff), according to Levels.fyi data. Microsoft’s AI Engineer median total compensation is approximately $282,000. OpenAI’s median software engineer compensation is $555,000.
Salary by Location
Location significantly impacts AI engineer compensation, even as remote work has expanded options.
| Location | Base Salary Range | Cost of Living Adjustment | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| San Francisco / Bay Area | $170,000-250,000 | Highest cost of living | Highest raw salaries; many AI companies headquartered here |
| New York City | $160,000-230,000 | Very high cost of living | Strong finance-AI intersection; growing AI hub |
| Seattle | $155,000-220,000 | High cost of living | Amazon, Microsoft, AI startups |
| Austin | $140,000-200,000 | Moderate cost of living | Growing tech hub; favourable tax environment |
| Remote (US-based) | $130,000-190,000 | Varies | Typically 10-20% below Bay Area rates; improving |
| London (UK) | £65,000-120,000 (~$80,000-150,000) | High cost of living | DeepMind, AI startups; lower than US equivalents |
| Other US cities | $120,000-175,000 | Varies | Significant variation; university towns and emerging hubs offer better ratios |
Sources: Glassdoor (2026), Built In (2026), Levels.fyi regional data.
The Bay Area premium persists but has narrowed. Remote AI engineering roles typically pay 10-20% less than equivalent Bay Area positions, but when adjusted for cost of living, remote roles in lower-cost areas often provide higher real purchasing power. Several major AI companies (including Anthropic and OpenAI) have maintained competitive compensation for remote employees, though some firms have introduced location-based pay adjustments.
UK AI salaries remain significantly below US equivalents — typically 40-50% lower for comparable roles. However, UK AI hubs (London, Cambridge, Edinburgh) are growing, and DeepMind and other research labs offer compensation that is competitive within the UK market.
Factors That Affect AI Salaries
Beyond role and experience, several factors create meaningful compensation differences:
Company stage and funding: AI engineers at well-funded startups (Series B+) often receive competitive base salaries plus significant equity upside. Early-stage startups offer lower base pay but larger equity percentages. Established tech companies provide the most predictable total compensation.
Industry: Financial services and healthcare pay premiums for AI engineers due to the regulatory complexity and business impact of AI applications in these sectors. According to Glassdoor, the top-paying industries for AI engineers are media and communications ($191,000 median), information technology ($167,000 median), and management consulting ($157,000 median).
Specialisation: Deep learning, computer vision, NLP, and reinforcement learning specialists command higher compensation than generalist ML engineers. In 2026, generative AI specialists (LLM fine-tuning, RAG systems, AI application development) are the highest-demand specialisation.
Education: A PhD is not required for most AI engineering roles, but it commands a salary premium of approximately 15-25% and is effectively required for research scientist positions at top labs. A Master’s degree in CS, ML, or statistics is the most common educational background for AI engineers.
How to Increase Your AI Engineering Salary: Skills, Certifications and Negotiation
For engineers looking to maximise their compensation trajectory:
Build production experience. The largest salary gap is between engineers who have built and deployed production ML systems and those who have only worked on research or prototype projects. Companies pay a premium for engineers who can take a model from experiment to production at scale.
Develop generative AI skills. LLM fine-tuning, retrieval-augmented generation, evaluation frameworks, and AI application development are the highest-demand skills in 2026. Engineers with these skills are receiving multiple competing offers.
Negotiate with data. Use Levels.fyi and Glassdoor data specific to the company and role level when negotiating. Companies expect negotiation — presenting market data makes the conversation professional rather than adversarial.
Consider equity carefully. At major tech companies, equity can comprise 30-60% of total compensation. Understanding vesting schedules, RSU refresh grants, and equity valuation is essential for evaluating offers accurately. A lower base salary with strong equity at a growing company may be worth significantly more over four years than a higher base salary with minimal equity.
Target high-paying companies deliberately. Compensation at AI-focused companies (OpenAI, Anthropic, Google DeepMind) is substantially higher than at companies where AI is a supporting function. If maximising compensation is a goal, targeting these employers specifically is more effective than general job searching.
Certifications that matter. The value of certifications in AI engineering is debated, but several carry weight with hiring managers: Google’s Professional Machine Learning Engineer certification, AWS Machine Learning Specialty, and Stanford’s online Machine Learning specialisation. These do not replace practical experience but can signal competence to recruiters and help pass initial screening for candidates without traditional CS or ML degrees. Industry-specific certifications (healthcare AI compliance, financial ML regulation) are increasingly valuable for engineers targeting regulated industries.
Remote work considerations. Remote AI engineering roles typically pay 10-20% less than equivalent on-site Bay Area positions in base salary. However, for engineers living in lower-cost-of-living areas, the real purchasing power of a $160,000 remote salary from a Denver apartment often exceeds a $200,000 Bay Area salary after accounting for housing, taxes, and cost of living. Several major AI companies maintain location-agnostic compensation (paying the same regardless of where you live), making them particularly attractive for remote workers. Research each company’s policy before assuming a location adjustment.
The PhD question in depth. The decision whether to pursue a PhD specifically for AI career purposes depends on your target role. For research scientist positions at top AI labs, a PhD is effectively required — these roles involve publishing papers, designing novel architectures, and pushing the frontier of what AI can do. For AI engineering roles building production systems, a Master’s degree plus 2-3 years of hands-on experience is typically valued equally to or above a PhD without industry experience. The opportunity cost of a 4-6 year PhD programme is significant given current salaries — a mid-level AI engineer earns $140,000-200,000 per year, so forgoing 4 years of earnings represents a substantial financial investment.
AI Engineer Salary by Industry: Finance, Healthcare, Manufacturing and Consulting
AI engineers do not all work in technology companies. The industry you work in significantly affects both compensation and the type of AI work you do.
Financial services: Banks, hedge funds, and fintech companies pay among the highest AI engineering salaries outside of pure tech. Quantitative AI roles at firms like Two Sigma, Citadel, and Jane Street can exceed $400,000 in total compensation for experienced engineers. The premium reflects the direct revenue impact of AI in trading, risk management, and fraud detection, as well as the security clearances and compliance expertise required.
Healthcare and biotech: AI engineers working on drug discovery, medical imaging, and clinical decision support earn competitive salaries ($160,000-250,000 base for mid-to-senior roles) with the added appeal of mission-driven work. The regulatory complexity of healthcare AI (FDA approval pathways, HIPAA compliance) creates specialised demand.
Manufacturing and automotive: Self-driving vehicles, robotics, and industrial automation represent significant AI employment sectors. Companies like Tesla, Waymo, and major automotive manufacturers employ large AI teams. Compensation is competitive with broader tech, particularly for computer vision and reinforcement learning specialists.
Consulting: Management consulting firms (McKinsey, BCG, Bain) and specialised AI consultancies hire AI engineers for client-facing roles. Compensation includes base salary plus performance bonuses, often totalling $200,000-350,000 for experienced consultants with AI expertise.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the average AI engineer salary?
The average base salary for an AI engineer in the US is approximately $141,000-185,000 depending on the source (Glassdoor reports ~$141K, Built In reports ~$185K). Total compensation, including equity and bonuses, averages approximately $245,000-293,000. These averages span all experience levels and company types.
Do you need a PhD for AI engineering roles?
Not for most roles. A Master’s degree in computer science, machine learning, or a related field is the most common requirement. A PhD is effectively required for research scientist positions at top AI labs (DeepMind, OpenAI, FAIR) and commands a salary premium at other companies. Practical experience building production AI systems can offset educational credentials for engineering (non-research) roles.
What are the highest-paying AI jobs?
AI Research Scientists at top labs (OpenAI, DeepMind, Anthropic) command the highest compensation, with total packages exceeding $500,000 for senior researchers. Among non-research roles, senior generative AI engineers and ML infrastructure engineers at major tech companies earn $300,000-500,000+ in total compensation.
AI engineer vs data scientist — which pays more?
AI/ML engineers generally earn 15-25% more than data scientists at equivalent experience levels. The gap is largest at senior levels, where ML engineers with production deployment experience command significant premiums. Data scientists who develop strong engineering skills can close this gap by transitioning toward ML engineering roles.
How fast are AI salaries growing?
AI engineering salaries grew approximately 9.2% year-over-year for mid-level roles in 2025-2026, with staff-level AI specialists earning an 18.7% premium over non-AI engineering peers at equivalent levels. Growth has been strongest for generative AI specialists and production ML engineers.
Is AI engineering a good career in 2026?
The demand and compensation data strongly support AI engineering as a career choice. The BLS projects strong growth in AI-related occupations. Compensation exceeds most other engineering specialisations. The field is expanding into new industries (healthcare, finance, manufacturing, legal) creating diverse career options. However, the field evolves rapidly — continuous skill development is essential to maintain marketability.
Last updated: 7 April 2026
Related Articles
Will AI Replace Accountants? What Is Actually Changing in 2026
Will AI replace accountants? We examine what AI can and cannot do in accounting, how the role is changing, skills to develop, and AI tools accountants should know.
Will AI Replace Lawyers?
AI is transforming legal work but not eliminating lawyers. See what AI can and cannot do in law, how the profession is changing, and which skills and tools matter in 2026.
Will AI Replace Writers?
AI has already changed writing careers. See which writing jobs are most affected, what AI still cannot do, and how writers can adapt with practical skills and tools.
Will AI Replace Graphic Designers?
AI image generators are changing design — but not replacing designers. See what AI can and cannot do in design, how careers are evolving, and which tools and skills matter.