$ cd /by-state/washington  -->~/devopssalary/wa/2026

Washington DevOps salary, 2026
$168K Seattle median, no state income tax

Washington is the SF Bay alternative for engineers who want FAANG-tier employer access without California state income tax. Amazon and Microsoft both headquartered in the Seattle metro create a similar employer-network effect; the absence of state income tax pushes effective take-home roughly even with SF Bay at the same base level. Triangulated from BLS OEWS Washington file, WA Employment Security Department wage data, and Levels.fyi Washington filter.

~/devopssalary/by-state/washington, bash

$ devopssalary --geo=WA --asof=2026-05-15

role: DevOps Engineer (general)

geo:  Washington, US

unit: USD / yr (base)

P10 = $108K

P25 = $138K

P50 = $158K (state-wide)

P50_seattle = $168K

P75 = $202K

P90 = $240K (Seattle senior FAANG)

+ wa_state_income_tax = 0.0%

+ effective_take_home_lift_vs_ca = ~9%

$

$ cat wa_cities.tsv

Washington DevOps pay by city

Seattle metro (Seattle, Bellevue, Redmond) anchors at the top. The state-wide picture is heavily skewed by the Eastside tech cluster; outside the Seattle metro, the band drops sharply.

wa_cities.tsv, 2026
citymedian basesenior tc
Seattle metro (Seattle + Bellevue)$168K$200K-$300K
Redmond / Eastside$172K$205K-$310K
Tacoma$128K$155K-$200K
Spokane$108K$130K-$170K
Tri-Cities (Richland)$105K$125K-$160K

The Amazon and Microsoft effect on local salaries

Both anchor employers in the Seattle metro hire DevOps and SRE in large volumes. Amazon's AWS infrastructure organisation hires several hundred DevOps and SRE engineers a year in Seattle and Bellevue, with the SDE I to Principal SDE ladder compressing the DevOps career path into roughly five rungs. Microsoft's Azure organisation hires at similar volume on the Redmond side. Together they account for around 30 to 40 percent of all senior DevOps hires in the Seattle metro in any given year.

That volume sets the floor. Mid-stage Seattle unicorns and out-of-state remote employers cannot price meaningfully below Amazon and Microsoft if they want to attract talent, because the engineers they target have explicit alternatives at the anchor employers. The result is a tighter band than SF Bay (which has more variance because the employer pool is more fragmented across FAANG, AI infra, and a long tail of unicorns) but with a higher floor.

The premium at the top of the band has shifted in the past 18 months. AI infrastructure satellites of SF-based companies (OpenAI Seattle, Anthropic Seattle, scale.ai Seattle, some Mistral hiring) now pay above Amazon and Microsoft for senior DevOps with K8s and GPU orchestration depth. Those satellite roles are rare, but they have reset the top of the local band by $50,000 to $80,000 of annual total compensation. See the AWS DevOps page and Kubernetes engineer page for more on what drives those packages.

The Microsoft side of the band has its own quirk: the Azure DevOps Engineer Expert cert (AZ-400) earns a larger premium inside Microsoft's hiring ecosystem than at any other employer, because Microsoft itself values its own credentials and several Bellevue mid-stage unicorns are stocked with ex-Microsoft engineers who carry similar preferences. Engineers targeting the Bellevue side of the Seattle metro should prioritise the AZ-400 over AWS Pro for cert spend.

$ ls wa_employer_tiers/

Top-paying Washington employer tiers

Amazon (AWS infra org)

$200K-$420K TC

Volume hirer. SDE band compression on DevOps.

Microsoft (Azure + GitHub)

$210K-$405K TC

Steadier RSU, strong benefits. Azure premium.

AI infra satellite

$280K-$480K TC

OpenAI Seattle, Anthropic Seattle. New top of band.

Late-stage Seattle unicorn

$190K-$320K TC

Smartsheet, Outreach, Highspot, DocuSign.

Aerospace / Boeing-adjacent

$140K-$235K TC

Lower equity but cleared-work premium.

No state income tax: what it really means for take-home

Washington's lack of state income tax (per the WA Department of Revenue) is one of the structural reasons engineers leaving SF Bay target Seattle first. The math is straightforward but worth showing. A senior engineer earning $185,000 base plus $75,000 of RSU has gross compensation of $260,000. In California at the same comp, the marginal state tax on the top dollars is around 9.3 to 10.3 percent, costing roughly $24,000 to $28,000 of state tax. In Washington that line is zero. Federal tax, FICA, and Medicare are identical between the two states.

The practical effect: the same $260,000 gross compensation produces about $24,000 more after-tax in Seattle than in SF Bay. That offsets a meaningful share of the housing-cost difference between the two metros (Seattle housing is also expensive but generally 20 to 30 percent cheaper than SF Bay equivalent). The combination of no state income tax plus lower housing means the after-tax-after-rent take-home in Seattle is materially higher than in SF Bay at the same base salary.

The trade-off is the equity ceiling. SF Bay AI infrastructure unicorns currently pay above any Seattle employer at the absolute top of the L5 senior band. Engineers chasing the maximum total compensation still need to be in SF Bay. Engineers optimising for after-tax take-home, FAANG-tier employer access, and quality of life are better served in Seattle. The decision is rarely close once an engineer prices it out honestly.

Engineers planning to own property: Seattle and Bellevue both have housing markets that are tight but more accessible than SF Bay. A senior engineer at $185,000 base can credibly target a $700,000 to $900,000 starter home in Bellevue or eastern Seattle within 3 to 4 years of disciplined saving. The same engineer in SF Bay would need 5 to 7 years and would target a smaller home. That difference compounds over a career.

$ man devopssalary-washington

FAQ

>What is the average DevOps salary in Washington state 2026?
Washington state median for DevOps engineers in 2026 is around $158,000 base, heavily anchored by the Seattle and Bellevue tech cluster. Seattle metro alone sits at $168,000 median, with senior FAANG-equivalent total comp clearing $300,000. The eastern Washington picture is very different ($90,000 to $115,000 base) but represents a thin share of state employment. Triangulated from BLS OEWS 15-1244 Washington file, WA Employment Security Department occupational wage data, and Levels.fyi Seattle filter.
>Why does Washington pay almost as well as California for DevOps?
Two reasons. First, Amazon and Microsoft both headquartered in the Seattle metro create a similar employer-network effect to SF Bay, with both companies hiring DevOps and SRE at scale. Second, Washington has no state income tax, so the after-tax pay for an engineer at the same base salary is 8 to 10 percentage points higher in Seattle than in SF Bay. Effective take-home for a $200,000 base engineer is roughly equivalent between Seattle and SF Bay even though headline base is 5 to 7 percent lower in Seattle.
>Does Amazon pay the most for DevOps in Seattle?
Amazon is the volume leader but not always the per-role winner. AWS infrastructure org pays SDE bands that compress the DevOps ladder ($175,000 to $360,000 total comp at L5 to L6, per Levels.fyi). Microsoft pays slightly less on base but compensates with stronger benefits and a steadier RSU programme. Late-stage Seattle unicorns (Smartsheet, Outreach, Highspot, DocuSign) and Microsoft sub-teams (Azure AI infrastructure, GitHub) often offer top-of-band packages at $290,000 to $420,000 total comp at L5. AI infrastructure satellites of SF-based companies (OpenAI Seattle, Anthropic Seattle) are at the top of the local market.
>What about Spokane and the rest of Washington outside Seattle?
The Seattle metro accounts for around 80 percent of Washington tech employment. Spokane sits at $98,000 to $125,000 base for DevOps engineers, the Tri-Cities at $95,000 to $118,000, and rural eastern Washington at $85,000 to $108,000. State government work in Olympia tracks the state government pay scale and ranges $88,000 to $135,000 depending on grade. Engineers in eastern Washington typically work remote for Seattle-based or out-of-state employers; the local job market for DevOps is thin.
>How does the lack of state income tax affect Washington DevOps pay?
Washington has no state income tax (as of 2026, per WA Department of Revenue). For a senior DevOps engineer earning $185,000 base plus $75,000 of RSU, that saves around $24,000 to $28,000 a year in state tax versus an equivalent California salary. The effective take-home from a Seattle $185,000 base is roughly equivalent to a $215,000 to $222,000 SF Bay base. That math is why many engineers leaving SF Bay for cheaper geography target Seattle first: it preserves access to FAANG-tier employers while cutting effective tax meaningfully.
>Is Washington adding new tech employers?
Yes, steadily. Several SF-based AI infrastructure companies have opened Seattle offices in 2024 to 2025 (OpenAI, Anthropic, scale.ai), partially to access Microsoft and Amazon talent migration. The Bellevue side of the metro has grown faster than Seattle proper for tech roles, with Microsoft, Salesforce, T-Mobile, and several mid-stage unicorns concentrated there. The local job market for senior DevOps has been one of the most robust in the US since 2023 despite the broader tech correction.