MSP Salary Negotiation Guide
Most Australian IT professionals leave money on the table because they don't negotiate. In the MSP industry, where margins are high and turnover is expensive, you have more leverage than you think.
Know Your Market Value
Before negotiating, you need data. The MSP industry in Australia has specific salary bands that vary by role, city, and MSP size. For the full picture of what MSPs charge clients vs what they pay engineers, see our Salary Black Hole analysis.
Salary Ranges by Role (2026 AUD)
| Role | Sydney | Melbourne | Brisbane | Perth | Remote |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| L1 / Service Desk | $50-62k | $48-60k | $46-58k | $48-60k | $45-55k |
| L2 / Desktop Support | $62-80k | $60-78k | $58-75k | $60-78k | $55-72k |
| L3 / Systems Engineer | $80-110k | $78-105k | $75-100k | $78-105k | $70-95k |
| Cloud / M365 Engineer | $90-130k | $85-125k | $80-115k | $85-120k | $80-115k |
| Security Analyst | $95-135k | $90-130k | $85-120k | $90-125k | $85-120k |
| Senior / Lead Engineer | $110-150k | $105-145k | $100-135k | $105-140k | $95-130k |
| IT Manager | $120-170k | $115-160k | $105-145k | $110-155k | $100-140k |
| Technical Architect | $140-200k | $135-190k | $125-175k | $130-180k | $120-170k |
How to Research Further
- Hays IT Salary Guide - Annual benchmark for Australian IT roles
- Robert Half Technology - Salary data by city and specialisation
- Seek Salary Insights - Crowdsourced data from actual job listings
- PayCalculator.com.au - Calculate take-home after tax and super
- The MSP Playbook Salary Calculator - MSP-specific benchmarks
The Negotiation Framework
Step 1: Establish Your Value
Before discussing numbers, position yourself:
- Quantify your impact - "I reduced ticket resolution time by 30%" or "I managed 150+ endpoints with 98% SLA compliance"
- List your certifications - Microsoft, AWS, Cisco, CompTIA - these directly affect MSP partner status
- Know your leverage - Are you in high demand? Do they need you urgently?
- Research their margins - If the MSP charges $180/hr for your time, you know there's room. Use our Salary Arbitrage Calculator to calculate the exact gap for your role and city.
Step 2: Name Your Number First
Research shows the person who names a number first anchors the negotiation. Use this to your advantage:
- Give a range - "Based on my research and experience, I'm looking for $X-$Y"
- Anchor high - Start at the top of your range to give room to negotiate down
- Justify the range - Reference market data, certifications, and experience
Example:
"Based on current market rates for L3 engineers in Sydney with M365 and Azure certifications, I'm targeting a range of $95,000-$110,000. Given my 5 years of experience and Microsoft certification, I believe the higher end reflects my value."
Step 3: Negotiate the Full Package
Salary is just one component. MSPs can often move on:
- Certification budget - Who pays for exams and study time?
- Salary review schedule - 6-month reviews vs. annual
- On-call rates - $X per hour on-call, $Y per hour called in
- Remote work - Hybrid or full WFH arrangements
- Leave - Additional annual leave or purchased leave
- Bonus structure - Performance bonuses, retention bonuses
- Professional membership - AITP, ACS, or vendor community fees
Step 4: Handle Objections
"That's above our budget." → "I understand. Can we discuss a salary review at 6 months based on performance? Or is there flexibility on the certification budget or remote work arrangements?"
"We pay based on experience level, not market rates." → "I appreciate that. However, market rates exist because that's what competitors are paying. I want to be here, but I also need to be compensated fairly."
"We're a small MSP - we can't match enterprise salaries." → "I understand the constraints. What about non-monetary benefits - additional leave, flexible hours, or a profit-sharing arrangement?"
"Take it or leave it." → This is a red flag. A company that won't negotiate on salary likely won't negotiate on anything. Consider whether this is the right fit.
Handling Counter-Offer Strategy
When You're Leaving
If you resign and receive a counter-offer:
The data is clear: 80%+ of employees who accept counter-offers leave within 12 months. The underlying issues rarely change. If you're considering leaving, review our MSP Contract Red Flags checklist before signing anywhere new.
Questions to ask yourself: 1. Why did it take resignation for them to offer this? 2. Will the culture/workload issues actually change? 3. Are you being paid market rate now, or just slightly more than before? 4. Will you be viewed differently going forward?
If the counter-offer addresses specific, documented concerns (not just money), it might be worth considering - but get everything in writing.
When You're Interviewing
If a new MSP lowballs you:
- Don't accept immediately - "Thank you, I'd like to review the full package"
- Re-anchor - Reference your research and the range you discussed
- Trade - If they can't move on salary, negotiate other benefits
- Set a deadline - "I have another opportunity closing this week. Can you confirm by Friday?"
When to Walk Away
Walk away if:
- The salary is more than 15% below market - They're not serious about competing for talent
- They refuse to discuss the full package - Only salary focus means they're hiding something
- The "competitive salary" is vague - If they won't give a number, they know it's low
- Probation terms are unusual - 6+ month probation or immediate termination clauses
- Non-compete is excessive - 12+ month blanket restrictions
- They pressure you to decide immediately - Good employers give time to consider
Special Situations
Moving from Enterprise to MSP
Enterprise IT professionals often face a salary cut moving to MSPs. Negotiate:
- Pro-rata for certifications - Enterprise certs are valuable in MSPs
- Higher starting level - Your enterprise experience should place you above entry-level MSP hires
- Client management premium - Enterprise experience with stakeholders is valuable
Moving from MSP to Enterprise
MSP experience is valuable but often undervalued by enterprise employers:
- Frame MSP skills as enterprise-ready - Multi-tenant management, SLA adherence, rapid problem-solving
- Negotiate based on breadth - MSP technicians handle more diverse environments
- Use MSP salary as baseline - Don't accept a pay cut for "stability"
Contractor to Permanent
If converting from contract to permanent:
- Contract rate as baseline - Your contract rate demonstrates your market value
- Negotiate from contract rate - Permanent roles should offer 80-90% of contract rate (accounting for leave and benefits)
- Factor in the gap - If the permanent offer is less than your contract rate, negotiate hard
[!TIP] The best time to negotiate is when you have leverage - either another offer, or when they've invested time in your interview process and decided they want you. Never negotiate from a position of desperation.
Related Guides
- Salary Benchmark Tool - Compare your salary against market rates
- 2026 MSP Salary Guide - Complete salary benchmarks
- Salary Arbitrage Calculator - See the gap between your pay and the MSP's bill rate
- MSP Interview Questions - Prepare for your interview
- MSP Contract Red Flags - Check your contract before you sign
- How to Escape the MSP Trap - If your MSP won't pay what you're worth
Was this helpful?