Before you accept a job offer, calculate the total compensation — not just the salary. Benefits, retirement matching, insurance costs, and growth potential can add (or subtract) $10,000-$30,000 from the offer’s true value.
9-Point Evaluation Checklist
| # | Evaluate | Key Questions |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Base salary | Is it competitive for your role, experience, and location? |
| 2 | Health insurance | What’s your share of premiums, deductible, and out-of-pocket max? |
| 3 | Retirement benefits | 401(k) match percentage and vesting schedule? |
| 4 | Bonus and incentive pay | Guaranteed vs. performance-based? What’s realistic? |
| 5 | Stock options / RSUs | Vesting schedule? Current stock value realistic? |
| 6 | PTO and leave policies | How many days? Sick leave separate or combined? |
| 7 | Remote/hybrid flexibility | Required office days? Commute costs? |
| 8 | Career growth | Promotion timeline? Learning budget? Title trajectory? |
| 9 | Company stability | Profitable? Growing? Recent layoffs? |
Total Compensation Comparison
| Component | Offer A ($90K) | Offer B ($100K) |
|---|---|---|
| Base salary | $90,000 | $100,000 |
| 401(k) match (4% vs. 0%) | +$3,600 | $0 |
| Health insurance (employer share) | +$8,000 | +$4,000 |
| Your insurance premiums | -$1,800/year | -$4,200/year |
| Annual bonus (10% vs. 5%) | +$9,000 | +$5,000 |
| RSUs (annual vest) | +$5,000 | $0 |
| PTO (25 days vs. 15 days) | +$3,460 value | $0 value |
| Commute costs | -$600/year (hybrid) | -$3,600/year (in-office) |
| Total compensation | $116,660 | $101,200 |
The $90K offer is worth $15,460 more when you count everything.
Health Insurance Comparison
| Factor | What to Compare |
|---|---|
| Monthly premium (your share) | Can range from $50 to $600+/month |
| Deductible | $500 vs. $3,000 makes a huge difference |
| Out-of-pocket maximum | Your worst-case annual cost |
| Copays | Doctor visits, specialists, prescriptions |
| Network | Are your current doctors in-network? |
| HSA eligibility | High-deductible plans allow tax-advantaged HSA contributions |
| Dental and vision | Included or separate cost? |
Retirement Benefits to Check
| Factor | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Match percentage | 4-6% match = $3,200-$7,200/year free money on $80K salary |
| Vesting schedule | Cliff vesting means you lose the match if you leave too early |
| Investment options | Low-cost index funds available? |
| Roth 401(k) option | Allows after-tax contributions with tax-free growth |
| Mega backdoor Roth | After-tax contributions with in-plan conversion (rare but valuable) |
| Automatic enrollment | Some plans auto-enroll at 3% — make sure to increase to match level |
What You Can Negotiate
| Negotiable Item | How to Ask |
|---|---|
| Base salary | “Based on my research and experience, I was hoping for $X. Is there flexibility?” |
| Signing bonus | “Would a signing bonus be possible to bridge the gap?” |
| Start date | “Could I start on [date] to handle my transition?” |
| PTO | “Is the PTO policy flexible for candidates with more experience?” |
| Remote work | “Would a hybrid schedule of 2-3 remote days be possible?” |
| Title | “Given my experience level, would [Senior Title] be more appropriate?” |
| Relocation assistance | “Would the company offer relocation support?” |
| Professional development | “Is there a budget for conferences, courses, or certifications?” |
Red Flags in a Job Offer
| Red Flag | What It May Mean |
|---|---|
| Pressure to accept immediately | They don’t want you to compare offers |
| Vague bonus structure | “Up to 20%” often means much less in practice |
| No written offer letter | Verbal promises aren’t enforceable |
| High turnover in the role | Something is wrong with the position or manager |
| Below-market salary with “growth potential” | Growth potential doesn’t pay bills now |
| Non-compete agreement with broad restrictions | Could limit your future career options |
The Bottom Line
Never accept a job offer based on salary alone. Calculate the total compensation including benefits, match, insurance costs, and intangible value like flexibility and growth. Ask for the offer in writing, take 3-7 days to evaluate, and negotiate — most employers expect it. A well-evaluated offer accepted thoughtfully is worth far more than a quick yes to a big number.