Local Salary Data

Computer Programmers Salary in Washington

Local DOL filings vs national average, with cost-of-living-adjusted purchasing power.

Local Median
$122,034
1 filings
DOL Median (Washington)
$122,034
vs National
+35.6%
National: $90,000
BLS Median (area)
N/A
COL-Adjusted
$106,487
Purchasing power equiv.

Salary Comparison

This Location (DOL)
$122,034
+35.6% vs national
National Average (DOL)
$90,000
Baseline
BLS Estimate (This Area)
N/A
No comparison

Purchasing Power Analysis

A Computer Programmers in Washington earns $122,034 in nominal terms, which is 35.6% above the national average of $90,000. After adjusting for the local cost of living (index 114.6 vs national 100), this is equivalent to $106,487 in national-average purchasing power.

Tax differences are not included. Only cost-of-living index adjustments are applied.

Top Employers in Washington

EmployerMedian SalaryFilings
Activision Publishing Inc.$113,5262

Explore More

All Computer Programmers data All salaries in Washington Best cities for this role

Top-Paying Metros for Computer Programmers

Irvine, CA · $171,813Parsippany, NJ · $145,000San Jose, CA · $130,000Santa Clara, CA · $124,000Redmond, WA · $122,034

Top-Paying Roles in Washington

Cardiologists · $630,174Surgeons, All Other · $460,127Emergency Medicine Physicians · $389,282Physicians, All Other · $228,228Chief Executives · $208,000

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a Computer Programmers make in Washington?

The median Computer Programmers salary in Washington is $122,034 based on 1 DOL filings.

Is Washington a good place to work as a Computer Programmers?

A Computer Programmers in Washington earns 35.6% more than the national median of $90,000, or $106,487 after adjusting for the local cost of living.

Job Search

Find Open Positions

Browse current openings and compare them against the government-filed salary data above.

Source: US Department of Labor, Office of Foreign Labor Certification (OFLC) public disclosure files (PERM Form ETA-9089 and LCA Form ETA-9035), and US Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS). Salary figures represent employer filings and government survey estimates, not individual worker pay.