Operations Manager salary across regions
Median annual salary by grade for the United States and Europe.
United States
Source: ГородРабот, BLS, Glassdoor 2025
Salary in the USEurope
Source: StepStone Germany 2025
Salary in EuropeSalary Calculator
Choose a profession, a region, and a level to see the salary range.
Operations Manager · United States
$95 000 – $130 000
Estimated annual Middle salary
Source: ГородРабот, BLS, Glassdoor 2025
What drives pay for Operations Manager
In 2026, Operations Manager pay runs from $75 000 – $95 000 at entry level up to $130 000 – $175 000 for experienced practitioners in the United States, according to ГородРабот, BLS, Glassdoor 2025. Demand for the role is steady, and that demand is the single biggest factor in where a candidate lands inside the band. Location comes next: the same role is priced differently across markets — Europe shows meaningfully different figures — and the numbers on this page break that down by region and seniority so you can see exactly where you'd sit.
Moving from junior to senior is less about time served than about measurable impact: a portfolio of shipped work, the scope of responsibility you take on, and the specialized skills employers are paying a premium for this year account for most of the jump between bands. Most career-switchers reach a junior-ready level in 6–12 months of focused study and land their first role roughly 3–7 months after that, so the progression is something you can plan against rather than wait out. When you negotiate, anchor on the senior band for your region — it sets realistic upside without overpromising, and it's the figure recruiters benchmark against.
The bands above are medians drawn from public salary data, not ceilings: top practitioners in high-cost hubs regularly clear the senior figure, while entry roles in smaller markets sit near the junior floor. Treat them as a planning baseline — pick your region and level in the calculator below to see the number that applies to your situation.
Operations Manager
Operations managers are the people who make a company actually run. Every process that got faster, every cost that came down, every team that hit its targets had an operations manager behind it — owning the workflows, reading the numbers, removing the blockers, and turning strategy into daily execution. It is one of the largest management roles in the economy, and the skills compound for anyone who likes systems, metrics, and getting things done through people.