Merit Increase Budget Calculator
The annual merit increase cycle is typically the largest discretionary compensation expenditure for any organization. Planning requires balancing market competitiveness, internal equity, retention of top performers, and budget constraints. The average merit increase budget in the United States has been approximately 3.5–4.5% of payroll in recent years, with top performers receiving 1.5–2x the average increase and low performers receiving 0–0.5x.
Calculate Merit Budget
Budget projections assume uniform distribution. Actual allocation should be differentiated by performance rating. Promotional increases apply only to promoted employees and are in addition to merit increases.
Merit Budget Components
| Component | Typical Range | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Merit Increases | 3 – 5% of payroll | Performance-based annual raises |
| Promotions | 8 – 15% increase per promotion | Role progression recognition |
| Market Adjustments | 0.5 – 2% of payroll | Competitive alignment for underpaid roles |
| Equity Adjustments | 0.5 – 1% of payroll | Pay gap remediation |
Frequently Asked Questions
How should merit increases be differentiated by performance?
A common differentiation model allocates 0–1% to below-expectations performers, 3–4% to meets-expectations, and 5–7% to exceeds-expectations. Top performers (top 10–15%) may receive 7–10%. This differentiation is essential for retention of high performers but requires robust performance management.