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Get Started ≫Base salary is the fixed, guaranteed component of pay for performing a role, before superannuation or pension contributions, variable pay, allowances or benefits. It is the anchor every other element of the package is priced against.
What sits on top of base
The full stack varies by country but the layers are consistent: mandatory retirement contributions (superannuation, KiwiSaver, CPF, pension auto-enrolment), variable pay, allowances, insurances and benefits, and paid leave loading where it applies. That is why comparing offers on base alone misleads in both directions: a lower base with a 17% CPF employer contribution or generous equity can out-earn a higher bare number, and employers budgeting on base understate true cost by 15-30% before anyone is hired.
Base as the system's anchor
Almost everything indexes off base: percentage pay rises, bonus targets expressed as a share of salary, severance formulas, insurance multiples, and often leave payments. Which means base decisions compound; a discounted starting base propagates through every future percentage increase, and a correction later costs more than pricing properly at offer. This is the arithmetic behind pay compression and behind candidates' reluctance to anchor on a low first number.
Fixed versus at-risk, honestly framed
The base-to-variable split is a values statement: heavy base says "we pay for the role", heavy variable says "we pay for the result". Neither is wrong, but mismatches hurt: high-variable packages in roles where individuals cannot move the number breed cynicism, and all-fixed packages in genuine sales roles subsidise coasting. The split should follow how much of the outcome the person actually controls.
Base is what you promise. True cost is what you carry. Know both.
See how it worksCommon questions
Is base salary the same as take-home pay?
No. Take-home is base minus tax and employee-side contributions; base is the pre-tax contractual figure. Offers quote base (or package); budgets should use true cost.
Does base salary include superannuation in Australia?
Convention varies, which causes real disputes: "$100k plus super" and "$100k package including super" differ by thousands. Offers should state it explicitly, and candidates should ask when they don't.
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