DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Executive pay climbed again in 2025—and the CEO-to-worker gap kept widening

June 20, 2026
in News
Executive pay climbed again in 2025—and the CEO-to-worker gap kept widening

Elon Musk earned more in fiscal year 2025 than any other public company executive—by an almost incomprehensible margin.

His $158.4 billion Tesla stock award, reinstated by the Delaware Supreme Court after years of litigation, placed him atop the annual executive compensation rankings published by C-Suite Comp, whose data covers approximately 3,700 public company chief executives and whose figures reflect fiscal year 2025 for most companies. The award was so large C-Suite Comp removed Musk as a statistical outlier before calculating broader market trends.

Exclude Musk, and median CEO total compensation rose 13% year-over-year to $4.75 million, while the average climbed 26% to $8.96 million. Both figures continue a recovery that began in 2024, after median pay declined in 2022 and 2023. The CEO-to-worker pay gap continued widening: The median pay ratio reached 99-to-1 in 2025, up from 92-to-1 in 2024, 85-to-1 in 2023, and 84-to-1 in 2022. The average pay ratio jumped to 216-to-1 from 175-to-1 the prior year.

Following the SpaceX and Tesla founder, the rankings were dominated by equity-heavy packages. Figma CEO Dylan Field took home $864.4 million—$861.9 million of it in stock awards—making him the second-highest-paid chief executive in the dataset. Welltower CEO Shankh Mitra followed at $821.1 million, with $813.2 million in stock. Opendoor Technologies CEO Kaz Nejatian ranked fourth at $741.1 million, his entire package in stock awards. Rivian CEO Robert Scaringe rounded out the top five at $402.6 million, the bulk of it in option awards.

Technology was the top-paying sector for CEOs, led by Field. Real estate ranked second, led by Mitra. The health care sector’s highest earner was Summit Therapeutics co-CEO Mahkam Zanganeh at $246 million, which included an option award modification the company disclosed in its filings.

The pay ratio figures show the gap between CEOs and their workforces has widened every year since 2022. Musk’s Tesla posted the highest ratio in the dataset at 2,522,203-to-1, based on a median Tesla worker salary of $62,786. Liberty Broadband’s Martin Patterson ranked second at 36,194-to-1—his total compensation was $1.2 million, but median employee pay at the company was $33. Opendoor’s Nejatian ranked fourth at 7,581-to-1 against a median employee salary of $97,759.

The trend has drawn scrutiny from investors and shareholder advocates alike, with Warren Buffett warning in his final Berkshire Hathaway shareholder letter executives are increasingly driven by what peers are earning.

Chief financial officers also saw gains across every market segment. Among S&P 500 companies, median CFO compensation reached $5.94 million, up 3.1% year-over-year. Across the Russell 3000, the median was $2.66 million, up 6.7%. The overall CFO market posted a median of $1.94 million, up 10.6%. The top of the rankings was led by Summit Therapeutics’ Manmeet Soni—who holds a dual COO/CFO role—at $249.1 million in option awards, followed by Welltower CFO Timothy McHugh at $167 million and Fermi Inc. CFO Miles Everson at $134.2 million.

Not every C-suite role moved in the same direction. Chief technology officers in the technology sector saw median compensation rise 10% to $2.59 million, while the average climbed 32% to $4.88 million—the dataset’s five-year trend shows tech executive pay declined in 2022 and 2023 before recovering in 2024 and rising further in 2025. Figma’s CTO Kris Rasmussen led all technology executives at $175 million, followed by Hims & Hers Health CTO Elshenawy at $60.9 million and Symbotic CTO James Kuffner at $37 million. Chief information officers moved in the opposite direction: Median CIO pay fell 7.3% to $1.34 million and the average dropped 19% to $2.13 million, reversing gains from prior years. The highest-paid CIO in the dataset was Humana’s Japan A. Mehta at $9.6 million, followed by Applied Materials’ Brice Hill at $8.5 million.

The post Executive pay climbed again in 2025—and the CEO-to-worker gap kept widening appeared first on Fortune.

A fake mountain and real magic transform Paris’ oldest bridge
News

A fake mountain and real magic transform Paris’ oldest bridge

by Los Angeles Times
June 20, 2026

Paris — There’s a present-day answer to the question that was posed in verse by the French medieval poet and street brawler ...

Read more
News

Sitcom mastermind James Burrows made TV feel like family

June 20, 2026
News

I went to Italy for the first time and left with 5 regrets

June 20, 2026
News

From YouTube to the multiplex: How low-budget horror films are beating big-budget studio bets

June 20, 2026
News

Britain Is Set to Test How Far Charisma Can Shift Electoral Dynamics

June 20, 2026
The Seven-Headed Hydra at the End of Finance

The Seven-Headed Hydra at the End of Finance

June 20, 2026
Trump in full panic over war restarting – and ‘swearing a lot about it’: insider

Trump in full panic over war restarting – and ‘swearing a lot about it’: insider

June 20, 2026
I was my mother’s caregiver until her death. Four years later, I’m still struggling with the $17,000 medical debt.

I was my mother’s caregiver until her death. Four years later, I’m still struggling with the $17,000 medical debt.

June 20, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026