After a years-long battle waged by the Fed, inflation—at least of the headline kind—appears to have subsided, settling in somewhere between 2 percent and 3 percent. But while the emergency is over, the damage—to the economy, to companies, to wages—will still leave a mark. CEOs are not immune.
To provide a more accurate picture of CEO and senior executive compensation in the U.S., Chief Executive Group Research collects annual pay data from more than 1,500 private companies and segments it by company size, sector and ownership type. A new analysis of the numbers from our 2024-25 CEO & Senior Executive Compensation Report shows private company CEO pay has effectively stalled during the past few years.
Inflation Pain
From 2020 to 2024, average wages in the U.S. exploded 26 percent, narrowly outpacing a 21 percent growth in prices over that period, according to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and Center for American Progress.
CEO pay, meanwhile, hasn’t grown nearly as fast, leaving median CEO comp underwater compared to inflation. Our data shows private company CEOs have experienced an 18 percent increase in their base salary from 2020 to 2024, including the wage recovery from the pandemic, when many CEOs chose to temporarily forgo their salaries to keep their companies afloat. If you adjust that for the average pace of price increases (21 percent, as previously noted), CEO base salary has actually decreased by 2.8 percent.
In 2024, the median base salary (excluding bonus, equity and benefits) among private U.S. company CEOs was $325,000 (for reference: the median S&P 500 CEO earned $1.2 million). The median performance bonus expected to be paid out to private company CEOs for 2024—if the company’s targets are hit—is $100,000 (versus $3 million for S&P 500 CEOs).