PayMetric Labs
Ireland · Hiring Guide10 min read16 June 2026

How to Set Tech Salary Bands in Ireland 2026: A Hiring Manager's Guide

Salary band decisions affect hiring speed, retention, and budget predictability. This guide gives HR teams, hiring managers, and startup founders a structured, data-backed approach to building defensible tech salary bands in Ireland for 2026.

HR teams

Band structures for CFO sign-off

Hiring managers

Offer competitiveness data

Startups

Budget planning per role

Recruiters

Candidate expectation benchmarks

The 2026 Ireland tech hiring landscape

Ireland hosts the European engineering hubs of Google, Meta, Amazon, Microsoft, Apple, and Stripe. These organisations set a compensation ceiling that every other employer competes against, either directly or indirectly. A software engineer who turns down your offer can realistically apply for a role at one of those companies within the same week. This is the market you are operating in.

At the same time, the market has materially settled since 2022. Median tech salary growth in Ireland is running at roughly 3.1% year-on-year in mid-2026, down from 8-12% during the post-COVID hiring surge. For budget planning purposes, this is the more sustainable baseline: structured salary growth, not inflationary repricing. The outliers are specialist roles in AI engineering, cloud security, and platform infrastructure, where demand significantly outpaces supply and salary growth is tracking 6-8%.

Remote and hybrid work has permanently expanded the competitive pool. Engineers in Cork, Galway, and Limerick are increasingly evaluated for Dublin-based roles, and Dublin salaries are increasingly the benchmark for remote-first companies with no Irish office. Your salary bands need to account for this: a national average figure obscures a real Dublin premium that is approximately 11% above the national median for most engineering roles.

2026 Ireland tech salary benchmarks by role and level

The tables below show the P25, median, and P75 salary range for each level across four core tech disciplines in Ireland. The upper quartile figure represents what the top 25% of candidates in this role and level command, typically at multinationals or highly funded scale-ups. Use the median as your anchor and the P75 as your ceiling for high-priority or hard-to-fill positions.

All figures: gross annual base salary (Ireland, 2026). Source: PayMetric Labs 2026 Real-Time Market Index. Free to share internally with attribution.

Software Engineer — Ireland 2026 salary bands

Gross annual base · €K · P25 / Median / P75

Full benchmark data
LevelP25MedianP75
Junior (0-2 yrs)42K50K58K
Mid (2-5 yrs)62K72K83K
Senior (5-8 yrs)85K97K110K
Lead / Staff (8+ yrs)115K128K145K

DevOps / Platform Engineer — Ireland 2026 salary bands

Gross annual base · €K · P25 / Median / P75

Full benchmark data
LevelP25MedianP75
Junior (0-2 yrs)45K54K62K
Mid (2-5 yrs)68K78K90K
Senior (5-8 yrs)92K105K118K
Lead / Principal (8+ yrs)120K135K150K

Product Manager — Ireland 2026 salary bands

Gross annual base · €K · P25 / Median / P75

Full benchmark data
LevelP25MedianP75
Associate (0-2 yrs)50K58K68K
Mid (2-5 yrs)75K88K100K
Senior (5-8 yrs)100K115K130K
Principal / Director (8+ yrs)130K148K168K

Data Engineer — Ireland 2026 salary bands

Gross annual base · €K · P25 / Median / P75

Full benchmark data
LevelP25MedianP75
Junior (0-2 yrs)44K53K62K
Mid (2-5 yrs)65K76K88K
Senior (5-8 yrs)90K105K120K
Lead / Principal (8+ yrs)118K132K150K
How to read these tables: P25 is your floor (entry point, new-to-role candidates). Median is your mid-point anchor (solid performers with expected experience). P75 is your ceiling for strong candidates. Upper quartile applies at multinationals or for hard-to-fill specialist positions only. Apply a Dublin premium of approximately +11% if the role is based in Dublin and you are competing against hyperscalers.

How to build your salary bands: a step-by-step methodology

This is the process used by most structured HR functions to take benchmark data and turn it into defensible, CFO-ready salary grades. It takes the guesswork out of individual offer negotiations and gives hiring managers a clear framework to work within.

1

Anchor to the market median

Start with the PayMetric Labs median for the role and level. This is the 50th percentile: half the market pays above this, half below. Your default offer position should be at or above median for any role where you need quality candidates in a reasonable timeframe. Below-median offers are viable only when your total compensation, brand, or equity story is genuinely superior to the market.

Default offer target: at or above the P50 median.

2

Set the band spread using P25 and P75

Your band minimum is the P25 (lower quartile) and your band maximum is the P75 (upper quartile). This gives you a band spread of approximately 30-35% around the median, which is the standard range for a single level. Do not compress the band to make it look tidy. A wide band is a retention tool: it gives high performers somewhere to go within the level without requiring an immediate promotion.

Band formula: P25 (floor) to P75 (ceiling), anchored at P50 (median).

3

Layer on total compensation

Once you have the base salary band, document what surrounds it. Irish employers typically offer: employer pension of 5-10% of salary, health insurance (valued at approximately €1,500-€2,500 per annum per employee), annual bonus of 10-20% at senior levels, and in some cases share options or ESPP. Total compensation for a Senior Software Engineer at €97K base could realistically reach €115-125K including pension and target bonus. This is what you present when a candidate says your base is below their expectation.

Total comp = base + pension (5-10%) + health + bonus + equity.

4

Apply location modifiers

If you hire across Dublin and remote locations, apply a location modifier explicitly rather than running a single national band. Dublin commands a premium of approximately 11% above national median. A mid-level Software Engineer at €72K national median would be €80K in a Dublin-specific band. Remote roles can sit at national median or slightly below if your remote work policy is a genuine differentiator. Be transparent about how location affects the offer: candidates will discover the formula during negotiation regardless.

Dublin modifier: +11% on national median for most engineering roles.

5

Define progression milestones within each band

A band without milestones is a retention risk. Employees at the ceiling with no visible path will look externally. Define at least three points within each band: entry point (P25, for candidates new to the level), established performer (P50, after 12-18 months at level with strong review), and advanced within level (P65-P75, before promotion threshold). Tie movement between these points to specific performance criteria, not tenure alone.

Minimum three progression points within each level band.

6

Review bands every six months

The Irish tech market has moved enough in recent years that annual band reviews are no longer adequate. A band built in January can be 8-10% below market by June in fast-moving specialisms. Schedule a formal market calibration in January and July each year, using current PayMetric Labs data as your benchmark source. Flag any roles where your band ceiling is below current market median and escalate to HR leadership before your next hiring round for that role.

Review cadence: January and July, using current market data.

Total compensation reference: Ireland 2026

Typical benefit stack for a mid-to-senior tech hire. Percentages apply to gross annual base salary.

ComponentTypical range
Employer pension contribution5-10% of base
Health insurance (VHI / Laya)€1,500-€2,500/yr
Annual performance bonus10-20% of base
Share options / ESPPVaries widely
Learning and development budget€1,000-€5,000/yr
Remote / home office allowance€200-€1,000/yr

Five salary band mistakes that cost you candidates

Most declined offers and prolonged vacancies trace back to one of these structural errors. None of them require more budget to fix. They require better calibration.

1

Anchoring bands to last year's offers

The market moved, especially at senior and specialist levels. A Senior DevOps band built from 2024 offer data is likely 8-12% below current market. Candidates will know, and they will use it against you in negotiation or simply decline. Calibrate bands against current benchmark data every 6 months, not at annual review.

2

Setting bands too narrow to allow progression

A band with a range of only €10,000 looks tidy in a spreadsheet. In practice it means a solid performer hits the ceiling within 18 months and has no visible route forward. Best practice is a P25-P75 spread of at least 30-35% around the median. That gives you room to differentiate on performance and gives engineers a reason to stay.

3

Not distinguishing Dublin from remote or regional

Dublin commands roughly an 11% premium over national median for most tech roles, driven by cost of living and the concentration of competing hyperscaler employers. If your bands are national averages, you are either overpaying remote hires or underpaying Dublin ones. Define Dublin-specific bands or apply a location modifier explicitly.

4

Presenting base salary as total compensation

Candidates in Ireland factor in employer pension contribution (typically 5-10%), health insurance (valued at €1,500-€2,500 per year), bonus schemes, and any equity or ESPP. If your base offer is below market median, a strong total comp story can close the gap. But if you just cite the gross base as if it is the whole number, you lose the benefit of everything else you are paying.

5

Under-weighting specialist premiums

Generalist software engineers and AI/ML engineers are not the same market. Applying a flat engineering band to all engineers ignores the 20-35% market premium that genuinely scarce specialisms command. Kafka expertise, MLOps tooling, and applied security skills each carry documented salary uplifts. Your bands need sub-tracks for specialist disciplines, or you will lose specialist hires to organisations that do.

Specialist premiums you cannot ignore in 2026

Applying a flat engineering band to all software roles is the most common budgeting error in Irish tech hiring. The market has bifurcated. Roles with genuinely scarce skills command premiums of 15-30% above the generalist median, and candidates know it. If your band treats an AI engineer the same as a mid-level backend developer, you will lose the AI engineer every time.

AI / LLM engineering (RAG, fine-tuning)

+25-35%

vs mid-level Software Engineer median

MLOps and model serving infrastructure

+20-28%

vs mid-level Data Engineer median

Cloud security (CSPM, CNAPP)

+18-25%

vs general Cybersecurity Analyst median

Platform / SRE with Kubernetes ownership

+15-22%

vs mid-level DevOps Engineer median

Data architecture (Snowflake, dbt)

+14-20%

vs mid-level Data Engineer median

Staff engineering (cross-team scope)

+20-30%

vs Senior Software Engineer median