How to Ask for a Raise When You Work Remotely
Asking for a raise remotely requires a different approach than in-person. Here's how to build your case, time your ask, and get the number you deserve.
Asking for a raise when you work remotely is harder than it sounds — not because remote workers earn less, but because the conversation happens entirely on paper and over video calls, with no body language, no hallway warmth, and no ambient proof that you’ve been grinding. If you walk in without a case, you walk out without a raise. This guide shows you how to build the case and have the conversation correctly.
Why Remote Raise Requests Fail
Most remote workers ask for a raise the wrong way. They schedule a meeting, say they feel undervalued, mention how long they’ve been at the company, and wait. Managers hear this as an emotional ask with no business justification. The answer is almost always a delay, a deflection, or a soft no.
The raise conversation is a business negotiation. You are presenting evidence that the market rate for your contribution has moved, that your output justifies a higher number, and that it is in the company’s interest to pay it rather than lose you. That framing changes everything.
Step 1: Know Your Number Before You Ask
Never walk into a raise conversation without a specific number. Vague requests — “I was hoping for something in the range of more” — get vague answers. A specific number signals that you’ve done the research and you know what you’re worth.
To find your number:
- Levels.fyi — best for tech roles, shows real compensation data by company and level
- Glassdoor and LinkedIn Salary — broader coverage across industries
- Payscale and Comprehensive.io — useful for non-tech roles
- Remote-specific job boards — look at what companies are currently offering for your role. If you can get an offer, that is the cleanest data point you have.
Research the range, find the midpoint for your experience level in your industry, and set your ask 10 to 15 percent above what you actually want. This gives room to negotiate down to your real target without underselling.
If you are based outside the US earning a US salary, do not let your cost of living be used against you. Your market rate is determined by the value of your output and the market for your skills — not where you sleep. Companies that try to adjust your pay based on your location are also accepting that they can hire locally for less. Push back or move on.
Step 2: Build Your Evidence Document
Before you schedule the conversation, build a one-page document — internal, just for your prep — that covers:
- Output over the past 6 to 12 months: specific projects, deliverables, and results with numbers where possible
- Scope expansion: anything you took on that sits above your current level or outside your original job description
- Market data: the salary range you found and where your current comp sits relative to it
- Your ask: the specific number or percentage increase you are requesting
You are not handing this document to your manager. You are using it to prepare your talking points so that when you are in the conversation, every statement you make is grounded in evidence, not feeling.
Step 3: Build Visibility Before You Ask
The worst time to ask for a raise is when you have been invisible. If your manager hasn’t seen strong output from you in the past 60 days, they have no recent frame of reference to justify the ask internally.
Before you schedule the raise conversation, spend four to six weeks making your work impossible to miss:
- Ship something significant and document it visibly
- Send a weekly written update to your manager covering wins and progress
- Get positive feedback from at least one stakeholder outside your immediate team
- Volunteer for something visible that delivers a clear result
You are not doing this to manipulate — you are doing this because it is how remote work visibility actually functions. The person who asks for a raise right after a major delivery gets a different answer than the person who asks out of nowhere.
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Tony Long II
@galaxybuilt
Solopreneur, systems architect, and founder of Galaxy Arbitrage. I left the traditional income trap and built a location-independent business from Southeast Asia. Now I document exactly how through weekly intel on geo-arbitrage, remote income, and automation. If you earn in dollars and spend in pesos, this is for you.
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