Monthly squeeze: Rent is the main drag, while the leftover buffer still looks thin.
Monthly take-home
$5,750
Left after costs
$1,320
Rent burden
32%
Safe salary line
$82k
Negotiation target
$96k
Safe salary line$82k
Minimum salary for a 70+ score
Negotiation target$96k
Ask for a stronger base or signing bonus
Reality snapshot
Three quick benchmarks before you decide, negotiate, or share.
Comfort gap$12k above line
You are above the current comfort line.
Savings buffer$420 buffer
Your leftover still clears the savings target.
Rent pressure4 pts above target
Rent is above the usual comfort zone.
Comfort rent cap$2,180 target rent
Your current rent is still inside the comfort zone.
Best next move
The single lever most likely to improve this offer fastest.
Salary ask$8,000 more base
That closes the biggest gap without depending on optimistic rent assumptions.
Why this score
A plain-English explanation of the biggest pressure, the stabilizer, and the threshold that changes the verdict.
Rent is the biggest drag, but the offer still covers your savings target. A slightly stronger base or cheaper rent would change the picture fastest.
TimingConfirm first paycheck, bonus, and reimbursement dates.
30-second verdict
A quick summary you can paste into chat before you send the full report.
CallTake, but only if the written package matches the modeled cash flow.
This tells you whether the offer is ready now or still needs one condition fixed.
Biggest dragRent pressure is still the main reason this score is not higher.
Use this line when someone asks what is making the offer feel tighter than the salary headline.
Ask firstWhat happens if rent, relocation, or the first payroll cycle costs more than planned?
This keeps the next conversation focused on the one unresolved pressure point.
Fastest ways to change the verdict
Compare two realistic changes before you negotiate, move, or lower your target.
Path 1Ask for $8,000 more base
New score 74/100 · $420 left after costs
Path 2Cut rent by about $250
New score 71/100 · $250 more breathing room
Before you say yes
Three things to verify before you sign, so a workable offer does not become a fragile one later.
Verify the written numbers behind this offer.
Confirm your first-month cash risk.
Know the one condition that would make you renegotiate.
Ask these before you sign
Turn the weak spots in this scenario into three direct questions you can send today.
Can you confirm the exact written compensation breakdown for this offer?
What changes if housing, commute, or relocation costs land higher than expected?
What review timing or flexibility options are available if the first months feel tight?
How fragile is this offer?
Three common real-life misses that can change a decent-looking offer faster than people expect.
Stress test 1Rent lands 10% higher
Score 68/100 · $180 less left each month
Your decision boundary
Turn the score into one clear green-light rule and one clear walk-away rule before emotions take over.
Green light ifThe written package matches the math.
Accept once the written offer confirms the numbers and your first-month cash risk stays controlled.
Walk away ifThe weak spot never gets fixed.
Pass if the employer cannot move on the one issue that keeps this offer fragile.
Market reality check
A quick anchor against this city's built-in salary and rent baseline, so you know whether the pressure is mostly your inputs or the market itself.
Salary vs city preset$8k above baseline
This offer is slightly above the city starter salary preset.
Rent vs city preset$250 above baseline
Your rent assumption is running hotter than the city starter rent.
Baseline verdictPasses the common rent and buffer checks
Use this line when you want a faster sanity check before sending the full report.
This looks like a market-average offer, but your chosen rent is what makes it feel tight.
Lifestyle standard floor
Translate cost-of-living style comparisons into the monthly standard this offer must protect.
Minimum monthly room$800
Keep this much after essentials to avoid downgrading your plan.
Salary to protect it$92,000
Use this as the equivalent-lifestyle salary floor.
Tradeoff to watchRent can move first
The quickest downgrade is usually housing, commute, or savings.
This offer protects your current lifestyle standard if the written package still leaves the modeled monthly room.
Pay range reality
Pay-transparent roles often show a wide range. Use your current offer, comfort line, and negotiation target to decide where this number really sits.
$90k$120k
Range positionMiddle of the workable band
This is close enough that written terms matter more than another guess.
Anchor to use$112,000
Use the number that changes the score, not only the public salary range.
Treat the range as context, then negotiate around the number that fixes this specific budget.
Range anchor rule
Ask from fitUse the number that clears rent, savings, and first-month cash, not the widest public range.
Trade carefullyOnly trade base pay for guaranteed cash, written review timing, or flexibility that protects the same monthly line.
Same salary, another city
Stress-test this exact salary against one other city preset, without changing your debt or savings target.
Current setup$1,320 left · 74/100
Your current city keeps this offer workable.
Switch to Austin, TX$1,760 left · 80/100
This city keeps more of the same paycheck after housing and tax assumptions.
A cheaper city can change the verdict faster than a small raise.
Lifestyle parity check
KeepCompare the same rent burden, commute pattern, and savings target.
ChangeOnly trust the city switch if the same lifestyle still leaves more monthly room.
Personal fit check
Housing shapeCheck whether the real home type, deposit, utilities, and commute preserve the city upside.
Life loadKeep family, healthcare, food habits, support network, and office days in the comparison.
Relocation gap to negotiate
Turn the city comparison into the exact package lever to ask for.
Base payAsk for the salary gap that would match the better city.
HousingUse rent support or a lower rent target to close the gap.
TermsTrade office days, commute support, or relocation cash for the same breathing room.
Cost input to verify first
Competitor calculators stop at city comparisons. Use this to decide which real-world number deserves a fresh quote before you trust the score.
First quoteRefresh the cost input that can flip the city comparison.
Proof to saveKeep one current quote before sharing or negotiating from the result.
Use it forTurn the quote into the next salary, housing, or terms ask.
Quote freshness rule
Fresh enoughUse a dated rent, payroll, or commute quote from the same decision week.
Stale ifRerun when the quote is older than the market or offer detail you are using.
Category parity
Match categoryCompare the same housing, commute, tax, and cash-timing category before trusting a cheaper-city result.
IgnoreIgnore broad city averages when a real quote changes the monthly decision line.
Your walk-away floor
Set one negotiation target worth pursuing, one minimum line worth protecting, and one condition that means this offer should stop here.
Worth pushing for$132,000 base
This is the version that moves the result back into a more comfortable range.
Minimum lineDo not go below $124,000
Below this line, the offer stays too dependent on optimistic assumptions.
Walk away ifThe weak spot stays unresolved
If they cannot move this one issue, the score is not the real problem. The package shape is.
Budget reality frame
Turn this offer into a simple monthly split, so you can compare it against familiar budget rules instead of only trusting the score.
Needs62%
Rent and fixed costs already take most of your take-home pay.
Buffer12%
This is the share left for your savings target.
Flex26%
What remains after core costs and savings is your real monthly room.
This lands close to a balanced monthly split, but the needs side is already leaning heavy.
Budget bucket check
Translate the offer into the three budget lines people compare on cost-of-living calculators.
Must-pay bucketRent, commute, debt, and basic living costs.
Choice bucketThe flexible money left for normal life after savings.
Protection bucketThe savings and cash cushion that keep the offer from breaking.
Decision lever
Move firstAdjust the one input most likely to change the verdict.
Target deltaUse the smallest monthly change that would make the score decision-grade.
ProofSave the written number before you negotiate or accept.
What life this offer supports
A quick lived-experience read: are you buying time, holding steady, or actually creating room to grow?
ModeStable mode
This reads like a usable middle: not loose, but not constantly bracing either.
You can
Cover the plan and still keep some room for small setbacks or normal social spending.
Watch
This is workable, but a housing jump or vague policy promise can still shrink the comfort fast.
First-month cash shock
Estimate how hard the move-in month hits before the new salary starts feeling normal, using rent, commute, and moving flags you already set.
Upfront cash to survive$5,400
This bundles the first rent cycle, deposit-style housing cash, and move setup drag.
Months to recover4.2 months
How long your modeled leftover would need to refill that hit without extra support.
Best cash leverAsk for a signing bonus first
Use the employer lever that closes this gap fastest if base salary stays stubborn.
This offer may work on paper, but the move-in month is where it can still break.
Package blind spots
Salary calculators stop at math. These are the three package details most likely to change whether this offer still feels good in real life.
Blind spot 1Benefits deductions
Get the exact paycheck deductions before you trust the take-home number.
Health premiums, retirement defaults, and commuter deductions can erase more room than a small salary bump adds.
A strong headline number can still break if one of these details stays vague or arrives too late.
Get the timeline in writing
A decent package can still fail if the cash, policy, or review timing stays vague. Lock the next three checkpoints before you sign.
Checkpoint 1Upfront cash arrival · Signing or relocation cash should land before move-in month
If the money shows up after deposit, movers, or first rent, it is not solving the real problem.
Reality receipts to collect
Before you trust the score, collect the three proof points that most often change the lived version of the offer.
Receipt 1Payroll proof
Ask for the real deductions, benefits, and timing that decide what actually hits your bank account.
Why it matters: a good headline number can still shrink after payroll and default deductions.
If you cannot get these three receipts, treat the current score as a draft instead of a decision.
Negotiation fallback plan
If base salary will not move enough, use these fallback levers to rebuild the package instead of accepting the weak version.
Fallback 1Ask for a signing bonus instead of waiting on base salary.
Use cash support to reduce the first-month pressure if the employer cannot move the annual number enough.
3 personalized suggestions
Decision kit
Use one message for HR and one for the person whose opinion you trust.
HR askFriend sanity check
HR negotiation script
94/100
Would you take this offer?
Monthly cash flow$1,320 left
Monthly squeeze: Rent is the main drag, while the leftover buffer still looks thin.
View pressure details
Monthly take-home
$5,750
Left after costs
$1,320
Rent burden
32%
Savings fit
Good
Rent pressure32%
Fixed-cost pressure62%
Copy the report, download a share card, or ask someone to sanity-check the offer.
Send this summary first
A shorter version for a friend, partner, or mentor before you send the full report.
I scored this Austin offer at 94/100. It leaves about $1,320 after costs, feels like stable mode, and my first ask would be a written check on the package details.
Need advice on: What would you ask for first?
Walk away if: The weak spot still stays unresolved.
Challenge this with: a fresher salary range, real rent quote, or written package detail.
Budget guardrails
Needs stay below 60% of take-home.
Buffer keeps at least 15% of take-home.
Flex keeps at least 15% for normal life.
Screenshot brief
Use this when you share only the score card instead of the full report.
CaptionWould you accept this offer after rent and first-month cash?
HideRemove company name, exact address, recruiter names, and personal IDs.
AskReply with the one proof line that would change your decision.
Decision receipt
A compact proof line for someone who only has 20 seconds.
DecisionNegotiate first.
WhyRent pressure is still the main drag.
Proof$1,320 left after costs.
LineWalk away if the weak spot stays unresolved.
Copy-ready opener
Use this when you want a fast reply instead of a long explanation.
I am pressure-testing one thing first: whether the written package still matches the modeled salary, city cost, and first-month cash.
AskCan you confirm the one written change that would move the offer score?
UsePaste this into HR, a mentor chat, or a community thread when you need a quick first reply.
Competitor signal check
Use the same three signals the market pages keep emphasizing: salary range, city cost, and community proof.
Salary rangeCompare the offer against a recent local or role-level range before you trust the headline.
City costCheck whether rent and living costs still leave usable cash after the move or commute.
Community proofUse one recent thread or peer reply to confirm the terms are actually realistic.
Decision memo before yes
Compress the score into one yes line, one ask, and one stop line before deadline pressure takes over.
Say yes ifThe written package still matches the modeled version.
Ask before yesSend the one measurable package change that fixes the main weak spot.
Pause ifThe written detail most likely to move the score is still missing.
Proof order before reply
Check the evidence in the same order a sharp offer reviewer would challenge it.
1. PayCompare the role against the freshest local salary range first.
2. CityThen confirm rent, commute, and first-month cash in the real neighborhood.
3. TermsLast, make sure the written package matches the number you modeled.
Send this to the one person who can stop you
A shorter checkpoint for the person whose answer would actually change your decision before you sign.
Send to: A mentor who knows your market pay range
Ask them to answer: What is the one package change you would insist on before saying yes?
Copy-ready check
Before I sign this offer, can you pressure-test it with me?
Compare these 3 anchors first
Use these when you want a fast second opinion before anyone reads the full story.
The safer salary line in this city.
The same salary in another city.
The same package if first-month cash lands later.
Use the freshest source closest to the weak assumption.
Benchmark readout
A compact read across salary, city purchasing power, and package terms before you compare offers.
Salary anchorCheck whether this clears the safer local salary line.
City powerCompare the same salary against a lower-cost city.
Package termsConfirm the written terms behind the headline number.
Market snapshot
Use this when you want the fastest compare point across pay, city cost, and written terms.
Pay gapHow far this package sits from the safer salary line.
City dragHow much rent and living cost eat into the leftover cash.
Written proofWhether the offer terms still match the model you scored.
Offer stack
NormalizeCompare base, bonus, stock, city cost, and written terms in the same monthly room.
Do not countIgnore prestige, vague upside, or unvested value until it changes cash or written terms.
Comparison guard
DeadlineCompare offers on the same decision line instead of the loudest deadline.
Cash timingNormalize base pay, bonuses, reimbursements, and first paycheck timing.
Policy matchCompare role level, city policy, office days, and review timing together.
Vesting window
Cash nowCompare guaranteed cash before bonus, relocation, equity, or reimbursement timing changes the story.
Later upsideCount delayed upside only after review dates, vesting cliffs, payout dates, and written terms match.
Monthly decision unit
Annual gapConvert salary differences into after-tax monthly room before comparing offers.
One-time valueSpread signing cash, relocation, or vesting value across the months it must protect.
Use the lineDecide only when the converted value changes accept, ask, or pause.
Expiry parity
Decision windowCompare deadlines only after both offers name the same written proof window.
Value windowCount bonuses, relocation, and review promises only for the months they actually protect.
Drop staleIgnore an older offer if its rent, payroll, or policy assumptions expired.
Baseline lock
Freeze firstLock the role, city, housing type, office days, and first-cash window before comparing benchmarks.
Rerun only ifRerun when new proof moves the same baseline across the monthly decision line.
Comparable lane
Same laneCompare only offers with the same role level, city, cash timing, and office policy.
Switch laneUse a different benchmark only when it changes monthly room enough to move the decision.
Skip laneIgnore prestige, vague upside, or anonymous advice that does not name a comparable number.
Delta audit
CountCount only the source difference that changes the same monthly decision line.
IgnoreIgnore prettier benchmarks that do not change accept, ask, or pause.
Benefits filter
CountCount benefits only when they change guaranteed monthly cash, costs, or written policy.
MemoKeep soft perks as notes until their date, owner, and cash effect are written.
Confidence check
Use this to decide whether the result is strong enough to share, negotiate from, or rerun with fresher evidence.
ConfidenceMedium confidence until the market and city evidence is refreshed.
Refresh firstUpdate the number most likely to change the verdict.
Use it nowShare as a draft, not a final answer.
Best source match
Pick the outside proof that fits this specific offer instead of browsing generic salary averages.
Start withA current salary, rent, payroll, or written-policy source.
Cross-check withA second source only when the score still depends on a weak assumption.
Share angleAsk people to challenge the exact proof line, not the whole decision.
Source receipt
DateUse a current source, not a stale average.
SourceName the salary, rent, payroll, or written-policy proof.
Decision changeSay exactly what number would change the yes, ask, or pause line.
Source age gate
Still validKeep it if the date, role level, city, and written term still match this offer.
Replace itRerun when the market, rent quote, payroll timing, or policy changed after the source date.
Source weight
Strong proofUse written offer, lease, payroll, and policy proof before broad averages.
Weak proofTreat community replies and broad averages as context until they name a comparable number.
Conflict rule
Trust firstUse the source closest to the written offer, lease, payroll, or policy detail.
Ignore for nowSet aside sources that do not move the monthly decision line.
Handoff note
Send toAsk the person who can verify the weakest proof line.
Ask forRequest one dated number or written term before rerunning the score.
Proof packet
Attach these three lines when you ask HR, a mentor, or a community to sanity-check the offer.
Lead proofShow the one outside source that would change the decision fastest.
Model lineState the score, city, salary, and leftover cash in one sentence.
Ask lineAsk people to challenge the exact assumption, not the whole life choice.
Paste order
HR or recruiter: confirm the written number first.
Mentor or community: ask them to challenge the weak assumption.
Partner or friend: share the final accept/ask/pause line.
Proof timestamp
LabelTag the source with role, city, date, and the number it changes.
ExpiresRefresh it before the offer deadline if the same line could move.
Proof fit
Use it ifThe source matches role, city, date, and written package terms.
Rerun ifIt changes monthly room enough to move the accept, ask, or pause line.
Reviewer lane
Send outRoute the proof to the person who can validate the number fastest.
Keep privateKeep the final accept, ask, or pause line beside the proof you will rely on.
Household signoff
ShowShare the monthly room, move-in cash, and commute tradeoff with anyone affected by the decision.
LockAgree on the one number that must stay true before you accept, ask, or pause.
Redaction guard
RemoveCompany names, manager names, exact address, screenshots, and personal identifiers stay out of public posts.
KeepCity, role level, salary band, rent range, and written-term type stay visible so advice can still be useful.
Next 72 hours
Turn the score into a short action window before the offer deadline gets noisy.
TodaySave the current proof line and send one written question.
TomorrowCompare the answer against one fresh salary or city-cost source.
Before deadlineAccept, ask again, or pause using the same decision line.
Reply rule
If the reply changes the written number, rerun and decide from the new monthly room.
Signing file check
Offer letterMake sure the written package matches the model before signing.
Payroll proofCheck deductions, reimbursement timing, and first paycheck timing.
Life cost proofSave one current salary, city-cost, or written-term source beside the decision.
Final edit rule
RerunAny change to written pay, rent support, office days, deductions, or cash timing changes the model.
IgnoreWarm wording, faster timelines, or prestige signals do not change the score without a number.
Start-risk check
Conditional termsProbation, background checks, or visa conditions should not replace cash certainty.
Revocable promiseDelayed bonus, relocation, or remote exceptions need a written date and owner.
Decision lock
Lock itSign only when the written terms, current cost proof, and final score all point to the same decision.
Keep openKeep one alternative warm if any major assumption still depends on verbal upside.
After-start rerun
First paycheckRerun if payroll, deductions, benefits, or reimbursements differ from the signed model.
First bill cycleRerun after real rent, utilities, commute, and move-in costs replace estimates.
First bill checkpoint
LogWrite down the first real cost that replaces the model estimate.
RerunReopen the decision only if that bill crosses the saved monthly line.
Actuals swap
ReplaceSwap estimated tax, rent, commute, utilities, and reimbursements with real first-month numbers.
DecideIf the real monthly room moves past the decision line, reopen the ask or close the file.
Proof expiry
RefreshRefresh salary, rent, commute, and policy proof before the final yes if it is no longer current.
IgnoreIgnore stale averages when a written term, live listing, or payroll proof gives a closer number.
Exit cost check
ClawbackCount one-time value only after repayment windows, vesting dates, and policy-change triggers are written.
If you leaveDiscount any upside that disappears or must be repaid before it protects monthly room.
Decision receipt
SaveKeep the signed terms, first paycheck, and first real bill beside the score.
ReuseUse the gap between model and actuals as the proof line for the next offer.
30-day review
CheckCompare the first real month against the score before the offer fades from memory.
SaveTurn the miss into one better benchmark for your next negotiation.
Regret tripwire
WatchName the first real-world miss that would make the accepted offer feel worse.
ActIf it crosses the saved monthly line, rerun before normalizing the new cost.
Next offer seed
KeepSave the biggest actual-vs-model miss as the first anchor for the next offer.
Test nextUse the saved monthly line before trusting a better headline next time.
Cost proof checklist
Before you trust any city comparison, verify the cost line most likely to be wrong.
Housing quoteReplace the rent estimate with a live lease or listing.
Payroll deductionCheck benefits, tax, retirement, and commuter deductions.
First-month cashConfirm when relocation, bonus, or reimbursement money lands.
Pressure split
Explain which monthly line is doing the most damage before asking for advice.
Housing shareShow rent as a share of monthly take-home pay.
Fixed-cost shareShow how much of take-home is already committed.
Room leftName the remaining monthly buffer after savings.
Evidence gap
Rank the one assumption that needs proof before the score becomes decision-grade.
Verify firstThe assumption most likely to flip the offer.
Fallback proofA second source to use if the first proof is not available.
Decision ruleHow to treat the score if proof does not arrive.
Ask for the exact number
Turn the weakest estimate into one number you can verify before you answer.
AskThe number that would make the score decision-grade.
SourceWho should confirm it and how current it needs to be.
Use itRerun the offer with the confirmed number before replying.
Fresh enoughReject stale salary, rent, cash timing, or policy evidence before deciding.
Freshness stamp
Mark which assumption expires first before you share the score.
SalaryRecheck if the range is older than 30 days.
HousingRecheck if the listing or quote is not active this week.
TermsRecheck if policy or cash timing is only verbal.
Alternative offer test
Before you accept this package, compare it with one realistic fallback instead of a vague better option.
Compare againstA realistic counteroffer or another city baseline.
This offer wins ifThe written package protects the current score.
Walk away ifThe weak spot stays unresolved.
When to rerun the offer
Do not keep trusting the old score after pay, rent, or terms move.
Rerun whenA written term changes the pay or cost picture.
Bring this questionDoes this change move the decision?
Save this proofThe current score, leftover cash, and main pressure point.
Next rerun checklist
When you come back, update these three inputs first.
PayBase, bonus, equity, and benefits deductions.
HousingRent, deposit, commute, and move-in cash.
TermsRemote days, review timing, and reimbursements.
Watchlist cue
TrackSave the number most likely to move before the deadline.
CompareOnly reopen the decision if that number changes the monthly line.
Find one backup signal
If you do not have another offer yet, create one small market check before you decide.
Ask one personA peer, recruiter, or manager who can name a real salary or policy.
Check one listingA current role in the same city, remote band, or lower-cost city.
Use it ifThe signal gives you a concrete number to compare against this package.
24-hour cooling line
Use this before you reply yes, especially when the offer feels urgent.
Pause ifThe written package does not match the model.
RecheckThe number or policy most likely to change your cash flow.
Reply withA short condition instead of an instant yes.
Post this before you accept
Use it for Reddit, Blind, Slack, or a group chat when you want a second opinion on the package shape.
Best place: Blind / Reddit / mentor chat
Title angle: Would you still take this offer after real rent and first-month cash?
Quick bridge: Headline looks fine, but I want a second opinion on the written package.
Context tags
CityAustin
Score94/100
PressureRent
AskWritten package check
I modeled this offer at 94/100. The headline salary looks fine, but rent and first-month cash are doing most of the damage. Would you accept, negotiate, or pass?
Bring these 3 facts
Austin · 94/100 modeled score
$1,320 left after costs · 32% rent burden
$4,800 first-month cash hit
Possible post titles
Would you take this offer as-is in Austin?
Is this salary enough after rent and first-month cash?
Negotiate this package or pass?
Ask people to compare it against
The minimum salary that would make this feel safe in the same city
The same salary in another city with lower rent pressure
The same package if first-month cash lands later than promised
What would you ask for first: base, bonus, or relocation cash?
Which part of the package is most likely to break after payroll starts?
Is this still comfortable after real rent and deductions?
Ask people to reply with
Take it / negotiate / pass
The first package change they would ask for
The hidden risk they would verify before signing
Trust replies that mention
Comparable city, level, and recent offer timing.
Written package details, not only headline salary.
One real risk to verify before signing.
Reply scorecard
FreshPrefer replies with a current offer, rent, payroll, or policy date.
ComparableUse replies from the same city, level, work mode, or company stage.
ActionableOnly rerun when the reply gives a number, date, or written term.
Route the replies
HR proofSend written-number gaps back to the recruiter.
Community proofUse comparable replies to refresh salary or city-cost assumptions.
Decision proofSend the final yes, ask, or pause line to one trusted person.
Reply quorum
EnoughUse three comparable replies before changing the model.
DiscardIgnore replies that do not name city, level, timing, or written terms.
StopStop reading when the next action is the same across useful replies.
Consensus line
Turn the best replies into one proof line before you message HR or rerun the score.
Close the loop
Reply backThank useful replies and name the proof you will verify.
Update the modelRerun only when a reply changes a monthly number or written term.
Archive the lessonSave the final decision line for the next offer.
Counterexample test
Try to disproveLook for one comparable reply that would change the current decision.
IgnoreSkip counterexamples that do not match city, level, timing, or written terms.
Bias check
Watch forReplies that overvalue brand, headline salary, or one person's lifestyle.
Correct withOnly compare advice against the same city, level, written terms, and monthly room.
Redact before posting
Remove company, team, recruiter, and exact start date.
Round salary, rent, and relocation cash before posting publicly.
Share only the cost assumptions you want strangers to judge.
Copy-ready post
Would you take this offer?
Sort the replies
After people react, use this filter to separate useful advice from generic reassurance.
Take seriouslyReplies that name a concrete package lever, number, or written term.
Treat as noiseReplies that only react to the headline salary.
Turn into actionConvert the strongest reply into one specific ask.
Follow up on the best reply
Use the strongest community signal as a second question, not a final answer.
Ask backWhich exact written term would you change first?
Need proofRecent city, level, salary band, or policy example.
Decision useRerun the model only when the reply gives you a number or policy.
Calibrate the crowd
Before trusting replies, sort whether the crowd is judging the same offer you modeled.
Check recencyPrefer replies with a current market, rent, or company-policy timestamp.
Check comparabilityDiscount advice from a different city, level, work mode, or company stage.
Decision useOnly rerun the model when a reply gives a number, date, or written policy.
Turn replies into a threshold
Before you accept, decide what proof would actually change the model.
Accept ifThe best comparable reply confirms the written package still protects the model.
Rerun ifSomeone gives a current number, date, or written term that changes monthly cash flow.
Ignore ifThe reply reacts to the headline but never closes the weak spot.
Turn the best reply into action
Use the strongest comparable reply to pick one next move before the thread gets noisy.
Use nowA reply with the same city, level, and recent written number.
Ask nextRequest one written term that changes the model.
Save for laterKeep generic advice as context, not as the signing trigger.
Stress-test the advice
Before one loud reply changes your decision, check whether it survives the numbers you already modeled.
If advice ignoresActual rent, written terms, or first-month cash pressure.
Ask backWhat single package change would make this worth accepting?
Decision ruleTrust advice that turns into a measurable ask.
Final 24-hour check
Before you sign, turn the score into three last confirmations you can actually verify.
One written proofConfirm the package term most likely to change the score.
One money guardrailMake sure the first month and savings line still work.
One decision lineWrite down accept, negotiate, or pass before pressure rises.
Change this in the offer email
Before the final yes, translate the model into one written edit the company can confirm.
Term to editAsk for the package line that most changes the score.
Why it mattersTie the edit to salary, rent, cash timing, or policy risk.
Exact wordingPlease confirm this term in the written offer email before I sign.
Benefits reality check
Check whether the non-salary package actually offsets the pressure in this offer.
Benefit to priceTranslate the benefit into monthly cash before trusting the headline salary.
Written proofSave the policy or offer line that makes the benefit real.
Decision useDecide whether the benefit lowers the negotiation ask or stays a nice-to-have.
Perk filter
Can countGuaranteed, dated, written value that reduces monthly cost.
Cannot countCulture, prestige, vague wellness perks, or future upside.
Proof price
Monthly valueConvert the perk into monthly cash before it changes the score.
Worst caseTest whether the offer still works if the benefit is delayed or reduced.
Tax and portability
Taxed valueKeep only the after-tax or reimbursed amount in the model.
Portable valueDiscount perks that disappear after a move, role change, or early exit.
Eligibility window
Starts whenCount the benefit only after the policy, start date, and approval path are written.
Expires ifRerun if probation, office policy, reimbursement deadline, or role status changes.
Acceptance clock
Turn the deadline into a cleaner yes, wait, or pause.
Decision windowUse the next 24 to 48 hours to verify the package.
Wait forHold for the written proof most likely to change the score.
Next actionAccept, negotiate, or pause based on the verified number.
Proof order before yes
Check proof in the order that changes the decision fastest.
FirstVerify the written package term that changes the score.
SecondReplace the city-cost assumption with a current quote.
ThirdAsk a comparable peer whether the proof is enough.
Deadline pressure filter
Accept pressureOnly accept urgency that comes with written terms, not vague momentum.
Ask pressureUse the deadline to ask for the one number that changes the model.
Pause pressurePause if the deadline replaces proof instead of producing it.
Proof follow-up plan
Decide who needs the evidence, when to ask again, and what to do if it stays vague.
Send toPick the person who can confirm the missing offer detail.
Follow up whenSet a short deadline before acceptance pressure rises.
If vagueTreat missing proof as part of the decision, not as reassurance.
Stop rule before signing
Turn the last weak signal into a clear do-not-sign rule.
Red flagThe final reply avoids the number, date, or written term that changes the score.
Compare againRerun the model using only proof you can verify today.
Do not sign ifThe weak spot remains verbal, missing, or optimistic after one final follow-up.
Regret test
Before the final yes, check whether this still feels defensible tomorrow and after the first month.
Tomorrow testWould you still defend this decision using only written terms?
30-day proofThe weakest assumption should become a real number, date, or policy.
Reverse ifThe final yes is only deadline pressure, not a better package.
Set the review date
A stronger offer still needs a checkpoint. Put the next salary, rent, or policy check on the calendar now.
Calendar checkPick the next date when written terms and real costs should be clear.
Number to re-runRecalculate the assumption most likely to change the offer score.
Trigger to actDecide what would make you accept, ask again, pause, or pass.
Review trigger pack
When the review date arrives, use one trigger to rerun, one line to share, and one condition to stop.
Bring back ifA written number, date, or policy changed enough to affect the model.
Share this lineI will rerun this offer when the written term that changes the score is updated.
Close it ifNothing written improved, so the current verdict still stands.
Review scoreboard
Log the rerun like a tiny receipt: what changed, what number improved, and what still blocks the yes.
Changed inputThe rerun should point to one written number or policy that actually moved.
Number to beatDo not celebrate the rerun unless the score or monthly room is clearly better.
Still blocked byName the remaining weak assumption so the next conversation is concrete.
Shareable review update
Turn the rerun into one public-safe update for a mentor, partner, or community thread.
HeadlineThe rerun is only better if a written number, date, or policy actually changed.
Proof to mentionShare the changed assumption without exposing employer-private or personal details.
Question to askAsk whether the new proof is enough, or whether the remaining blocker still wins.
Ask HR these 3 lines
Turn the model into three short confirmations a recruiter can answer clearly.
Written packageWhat exact written term should I confirm before I say yes?
Money gapWhich number or support line changes the monthly outcome most?
Decision timingWhat can be confirmed now versus after I start?
Bundle the ask
Send one grouped clarification so salary, city costs, and policy terms stay in the same written thread.
Opening lineBefore I accept, I want to confirm the written terms that keep the offer workable after real monthly costs.
Attach proofAttach one redacted number or policy term from the model, not the whole private offer.
Close withPlease reply in writing with the exact number, date, or policy I should use for the final rerun.
Written term checklist
Count a reply only when it has the pieces needed for a final rerun.
AmountThe number, percentage, stipend, or policy limit is specific.
DateThe payout, review, reimbursement, or start date is clear.
OwnerThe person or team responsible for honoring it is named.
ConditionAny clawback, eligibility rule, or office-day condition is written.
Script guardrail
Keep the message short, comparable, and tied to the one term that changes the score.
Lead with fitName the role, city, and monthly result before asking for a change.
Ask one leverRequest the salary, support, timing, or policy term that moves the model.
Close in writingAsk for the exact number, date, owner, and condition to use in the final rerun.
Reply triage
Sort the HR reply before you rerun, chase, or count it as real.
Rerun nowThe reply gives a written number, date, owner, and condition that changes monthly room.
Ask once moreThe reply is useful but still missing one detail needed for the final model.
Do not countWarm language, urgency, or verbal upside stays outside the score.
Ask the hiring manager these 3 lines
Push beyond the salary headline and ask about the day-to-day reality behind the package.
First 90 daysWhat would make this offer feel clearly worth it in the first 90 days, beyond the headline salary?
Success lineIf I accept, what specific outcome would tell both of us this package was strong enough?
One flexibility leverIf the cash package cannot change, what non-cash flexibility would you put in writing first?
Role reality receipt
Translate the manager's answer into one checkable work reality before you trust the package.
Verify the loadName the meeting load, office rhythm, launch pressure, or on-call reality that changes weekly cost.
Ask for proofUse a team norm, roadmap date, policy line, or first-90-days success metric instead of a vibe.
Rerun ifThe role reality changes commute, savings runway, or the monthly value of the package.
If HR says base is fixed
Turn the fallback plan into one short written ask before the conversation goes vague.
Best fallback leverPick the one package trade that closes the gap fastest.
Written proofAsk for the exact term in writing, not a verbal placeholder.
Copy-ready lineUse one sentence that turns a no on base into a concrete next option.
If the answer is no or slow
Keep the thread useful by turning silence into one dated decision point.
Decision timerSet a short reply window, then compare the offer against your walk-away floor.
Proof to wait forWait for one written package term tied to the weak spot, not another broad promise.
Community updateShare the base-is-fixed update plus the one written offset you are waiting on.
Hold line before the deadline
Use the waiting period to pin down one backup path so the fallback does not trap you in a weak yes.
Floor to protectWrite down the one weak assumption you refuse to absorb if no written offset arrives.
Backup moveQueue one realistic alternative so the next decision compares options instead of deadline pressure.
Exit sentenceIf the written offset is still missing by the deadline, protect the current floor instead of inventing new hope.
How to read the reply
Once HR or the manager replies, sort it fast so the next move is obvious.
Counts as progressA written change, number, timeline, or policy you can compare against the model.
Still vagueA friendly reply that adds no package term, date, or written commitment.
Next moveIf it stays vague, repeat one concrete ask instead of restarting the whole negotiation.
After they reply
Translate the answer into a yes, one more ask, or a pause.
Clear yesOnly close if the updated term is written and matches the model.
Partial fixAsk once for the missing term that still blocks the decision.
No real changeSlow down instead of treating a warm reply as progress.
Send the follow-up
If the reply is polite but vague, send one tighter message instead of reopening the whole negotiation.
Before you send it
Pick the recipient and proof point first, so the follow-up lands as a specific request.
Send toChoose the owner who can confirm the package term.
Why nowName the decision risk you are trying to close.
Attach proofInclude one number or written term that anchors the ask.
Thanks for clarifying. Could you put the specific package change and timing in writing so I can compare it against the offer model?
The score is a planning signal, not financial advice. It focuses on cash flow after rent, taxes, fixed costs, basic living costs, and a savings target.
Score formula
Monthly take-home minus rent, commute, debt, basic living costs, and target savings becomes the flexibility base. Rent burden and fixed-cost pressure adjust the final 0-100 score.
Why 70+ can work
A score above 70 usually means the offer leaves room after essentials and savings. Scores from 50-69 suggest negotiation. Below 50 means the plan is fragile.
Rent pressure threshold
Rent below 30% of take-home is usually safer. Rent above 33% deserves caution. Rent above 40% often requires a higher salary, lower savings target, or cheaper housing.
Tax estimate
The tax field is editable because payroll taxes vary by location, benefits, filing status, deductions, and relocation details. Use your payroll estimate when available.
When to negotiate
Negotiate when rent pressure is high, savings fit is weak, relocation is required, or the leftover after essentials does not protect emergencies.
When to reconsider
Reconsider when the score stays below 50 after realistic assumptions, or when accepting the offer would depend on optimistic costs you cannot verify.
Trust and data
Data assumptions and review notes
OfferScope uses transparent planning assumptions so users can replace defaults with verified numbers before making a financial decision.
Salary references
City and role examples are planning presets based on public salary ranges and common market discussions, not guaranteed compensation.
Rent assumptions
Rent presets are city-level starting points. Users should replace them with actual lease, neighborhood, or housing quotes.
Tax assumptions
Tax rates are editable estimates. Payroll, filing status, benefits, state taxes, and deductions can change take-home pay.
Cost-of-living assumptions
Living costs include a practical monthly baseline for food, utilities, insurance, transport, and recurring essentials.
Who maintains this
OfferScope is maintained as a salary decision product. The calculator is designed to help job seekers discuss offers with clearer numbers.
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Use focused pages for job offer calculators, city salary checks, career salary guides, negotiation planning, and global salary data.
Open the deeper references only when you need them.
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Use these city guides to evaluate rent, tax, cost-of-living, and monthly cash-flow pressure for U.S. or overseas job offers.
Show FAQWhat score is good enough?
A score above 70 usually means the offer has room for rent, fixed costs, and savings. A score below 50 means the offer deserves more negotiation or a lower-cost plan.
Why is the tax rate editable?
Payroll taxes vary by location, filing status, benefits, and deductions. Editable tax makes the calculator useful without pretending to be formal tax advice.
Does the tool require an account?
No. You can calculate an offer, adjust the numbers, and copy the result without creating an account.
Data notes
Figures are planning references based on public salary and cost-of-living sources where available. Use them as a starting point and verify details before making a financial decision.