The partner manager job market in 2026 sits in an awkward middle. Base pay has held up better than direct sales roles. Total comp lags the AE world. And the spread between the bottom and the top is wider than any other quota-carrying role we track.
The median disclosed base for a partner manager in our dataset is $120,300. The top of the disclosed range hits $500,000. That spread between the median and the ceiling is unusually wide for a single function.
This piece walks through what 767 disclosed salaries say about partner manager pay in 2026. It also covers what they fail to say, because 31 percent of partner roles we tracked do not disclose salary at all, even in states where they are supposed to.
The Baseline: Median, Average, and the Outliers
Across 1,108 partner and channel roles tracked in our dataset, 767 disclosed a salary band. That gives us a 69.2 percent disclosure rate, lower than direct sales roles and noticeably lower than tech roles overall.
Of the disclosing roles:
- Median base: $120,300
- Average base midpoint: $128,240
- Bottom of disclosed range: under $5,000 (likely part-time or commission-only roles)
- Top of disclosed range: $500,000
The average sits above the median, which tells us the distribution skews right. A small number of very high-paying roles pull the mean up. For most working partner managers, the median is the more honest number to plan around.
Pay by Seniority
Here is where the spread starts to make sense. Partner manager pay tracks closely with seniority once you control for it.
- Entry-level (48 postings): $75K to $120K average band, $70K median.
- Mid-level (398 postings): $113K to $166K average band, $102K median. The largest cohort by far.
- Senior (123 postings): $142K to $204K average band, $135K median.
- Director (136 postings): $151K to $203K average band, $145K median.
- VP (26 postings): $165K to $222K average band, $156K median.
- SVP (6 postings): $219K to $283K average band, $185K median.
- "Head of" (19 postings): $164K to $222K average band, $150K median.
The mid-to-senior step is the one to fight for. Mid-level is the median floor for most working partner managers; senior is where base, scope, and the path to leadership all step up, usually at the four-to-six year mark. Senior to director rewards the move into people management. Director to VP rewards scope and equity more than base.
If you are mapping a partner career path, the mid-to-senior step is where you fight hardest for the title and pay. Senior to director rewards the move into people management. Director to VP rewards scope and equity, not base alone.
Pay by Metro
Location still matters more than companies like to admit. San Francisco pays the steepest premium for partner roles, well above the national median, followed by Seattle (climbing fast as Microsoft, Amazon, and AWS-adjacent partner teams expand) and New York, which is the largest market by volume. The secondary metros (Chicago, Denver, Boston, Miami) sit below the national median, and their small sample sizes mean any single number there is worth treating with caution.
We keep a live, per-metro breakdown updated every week. See partner manager salary by location for the current medians, sample sizes, top employers, and metro-specific negotiation notes.
Remote vs. Onsite
Onsite roles pay more, and the gap has widened. Onsite partner roles increasingly cluster in the highest-paying metros (SF, NYC, Seattle), pulling the onsite median up. Remote partner roles skew toward smaller companies and earlier-stage programs, pulling the remote median down. If you are negotiating a remote partner role at a large company, anchor on the onsite band for your metro, not the national remote median. The current remote-vs-onsite split lives on our remote vs onsite page.
The Top End of the Market
The highest-paying partner roles cluster in three areas: payments and fintech, healthcare and care-platform partnerships, and ecosystem leadership at large platform companies. The roles at the top of the band are VP and SVP positions where partnership work touches real revenue movement (card networks, healthcare reimbursement, marketplace co-sell). The disclosed ceiling across the dataset is $500,000.
The word "ecosystem" continues to show up at the top of the market more often than "channel." The highest-paid partner roles are increasingly framed as ecosystem leadership rather than traditional channel sales management. That language shift matters for how you position your own background when you go to market.
What Is Not in the Data
Three caveats worth holding in your head as you read these numbers.
First, these are base salary midpoints. Total comp for partner roles often includes a 30 to 50 percent variable component, plus equity at venture-backed companies. Most of the dataset is base only. A $120K median base for a mid-level partner manager typically maps to $160K to $200K OTE.
Second, 69.2 percent disclosure is low. Several large markets (notably California, Colorado, and New York) require salary disclosure in postings, but the requirement is patchily enforced and exemptions are common. The 31 percent of roles with no disclosed band skew enterprise and senior, which means the true median is probably a touch higher than $120K.
Third, this is a snapshot of postings, not a longitudinal study of comp progression. We track what companies offer for new hires. Internal promotion raises, retention adjustments, and exit packages do not appear here. If you have been in the same partner manager seat for three years, your comp may have drifted away from market in either direction.
How to Use This
If you are interviewing for a partner manager role right now, three takeaways:
One: the mid-to-senior jump is your biggest leverage point. If a company is hiring you as a senior IC and offering you a mid-level band, push back with the data. The gap between the $102K mid-level median and the $135K senior median is real money.
Two: if the role does not disclose a band, ask early. Not at offer stage, at first call. Companies that hide bands tend to anchor low. The 31 percent of postings that hide pay are a flag worth investigating before you spend hours in the interview loop.
Three: VP-level partner roles are increasingly ecosystem-shaped. If your background is traditional channel sales (deal registration, partner tiering, MDF), and you want to move up, you need a thesis on how ecosystem strategy connects to revenue. Without it, you cap out around senior director.
We update this dataset weekly. The next version of this analysis, mid-2026, will look at how the AI tooling shift is changing what partner managers are being hired to build.