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Full Stack Developer salary in the US

Median annual salary for Full Stack Developer in the US across junior, middle, and senior levels, with sources and an interactive calculator.

$United States

Junior

$80 000 – $105 000

Middle

$105 000 – $145 000

Senior

$145 000 – $190 000

Source: Habr Career, Glassdoor 2025

Salary Calculator

Choose a profession, a region, and a level to see the salary range.

Region
Level

Full Stack Developer · United States

$105 000 – $145 000

Estimated annual Middle salary

Junior$80 000 – $105 000
Middle$105 000 – $145 000
Senior$145 000 – $190 000

Source: Habr Career, Glassdoor 2025

What drives pay for Full Stack Developer in the US

For a Full Stack Developer in the United States, pay runs from $80 000 – $105 000 at entry level to $145 000 – $190 000 for senior practitioners, with an overall span of $80 000 – $190 000 according to Habr Career, Glassdoor 2025. Demand is high and competition for experienced practitioners is strong, so where you land inside the band depends more on demonstrated skill and the scope of responsibility you take on than on years in the field alone.

The United States: figures are gross annual salaries in USD, typically quoted as base pay before bonuses and equity. Coastal tech hubs — the San Francisco Bay Area, New York, and Seattle — set the top of the band, while remote-first employers have broadened access to senior-level pay across lower-cost states. Use the calculator below to place yourself: pick a level and compare it against the other regions, so you can tell at a glance where an offer is fair and where it's worth pushing back on.

Most of the lifetime earnings growth happens in the jump from junior to middle: the mid-level band sits at $105 000 – $145 000, and reaching it usually follows a year or two of real, shipped work. That makes the early months disproportionately valuable — the projects you deliver now compound into the band you can negotiate next.

Full Stack Developer

Full stack developers can build entire products from database to interface. Companies pay a premium for engineers who can own features end-to-end and switch between frontend and backend seamlessly.

View the Full Stack Developer roadmap