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PPC salaries are splitting: Which side are you on?

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PPC salaries are splitting- Which side are you on

Every year, Duane Brown’s PPC Salary Survey gives our industry one of the few honest looks at what practitioners are actually earning. The 2026 edition, with 445 responses across 50+ countries, is no different. This year, one pattern stands out above the rest: the middle of the salary curve is getting squeezed from both ends.

PPC salaries aren’t falling, at least not uniformly. The gap between practitioners commanding top-end pay and those stuck at the baseline is wider than it’s ever been, and the trajectory of the two groups is now clearly diverging.

AI is acting as an accelerant here, but the underlying shift runs deeper and has been building for years.

What four years of salary data actually show

The salary survey has tracked U.S. median pay by experience since 2018. When you line up four consecutive years of data, a clear pattern emerges:

Experience20222023202420252026
3-5 years$80,000$80,016$80,000$75,000$87,500
6-9 years$100,000$110,000$108,000$110,000$100,000
10-15 years$125,000$150,000$136,000$133,500$135,000
15+ years$150,000$134,000$144,000$140,000$150,000

Two things stand out. 

  • The 3-5 year band bounced back sharply in 2026 to $87,500, the highest it has been in five years, after dipping to $75,000 in 2025. This suggests that junior-to-mid practitioners who do find work are being paid reasonably well.
  • The 6-9 year band has slipped back to $100,000 after holding at $108,000-$110,000 for three years. And the 10-15 year band, the cohort that should be commanding senior-level pay, has flatlined between $133,500 and $136,000 for three consecutive years. For practitioners with a decade of experience, pay has stagnated or declined after inflation adjustment.

The discrepancy becomes even sharper when you look at the extremes. The survey’s U.S. data shows maximum salaries well above $300,000 for the 10-15 years cohort, and a freelance median for practitioners with 10-15 years of experience sitting at $202,895, compared to an agency median of $123,545 for the same range. That’s a $79,000 premium for going independent, but only if you’ve built something worth paying that premium for.

In-house vs. agency: Where the real divergence lives

The 2026 survey data reveal another split worth careful examination: the growing gap between in-house and agency salaries at mid-career levels.

ExperienceAgency (median)In-house (median)Difference
3-5 years$80,000$89,000+$9,000
6-9 years$90,000$170,000+$80,000
10-15 years$123,545$140,000+$16,455
15+ years$120,000$140,000+$20,000

The 6-9 year in-house figure is striking, and partly skewed by a small sample with significant outliers. But the signal is consistent across all experience ranges: in-house practitioners are out-earning their agency counterparts, sometimes substantially.

For a practitioner with 10-15 years of experience, choosing in-house over agency represents a $16,000 annual premium on the median. That gap has been widening year on year.

This matters for how you think about the salary discrepancy story. It’s not just about individual skill development, it’s also about which side of the table you sit on. Agency work, for all its variety, isn’t being rewarded at the rate in-house strategy roles are.

As platforms automate more execution work, the strategic advisory value of agency practitioners becomes harder to justify at current billing rates, which may be suppressing salaries from the top down.

The gender pay gap: Mixed signals

The 2026 survey shows a more nuanced gender pay picture than in previous years, and it’s worth addressing directly rather than glossing over.

At the 3-5 years level, female practitioners in the U.S. are actually earning a higher median than male counterparts ($87,500 vs. $85,000). At the 10-15 year band, the female median ($135,000) also slightly exceeds the male median ($130,000). But the gap opens dramatically at the senior end: practitioners with 15+ years of experience show a $150,000 male median against a $120,000 female median, a 25% gap.

This pattern is consistent with broader compensation research: gender pay gaps in knowledge work tend to compress at mid-career and widen significantly at senior levels, where negotiation, visibility, and access to high-value client relationships play a larger role than raw technical competence. 

For a profession that’s becoming more strategic, and where those factors matter more, not less, this is something the industry needs to take seriously.

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The U.K. and Europe picture: Stagnation at the top

Outside the U.S., the salary trends are more concerning. In the U.K., the 5-year survey trend shows the 10-15 year band median bouncing between £48,800 and £60,000 with no clear upward trajectory, and in 2026 it sits at £50,000, down from £60,000 the year prior. For practitioners at the peak of their careers in the U.K., real-terms pay has effectively declined.

In Europe, the pattern is more positive at senior levels, the 10-15 year band EU median has grown from €50,000 in 2024 to €65,625 in 2026, a meaningful step up. But the 3-5 year band has slipped back to €37,200, below where it was in 2022. Entry-level and early-career pay in Europe isn’t keeping pace with the increasing demands of the role.

For German practitioners specifically, Berlin data from the 2026 survey shows a 10-15 year band median of approximately €76,000, meaningfully above the broader EU figure, and a sign that the Berlin market continues to reward senior experience more than the European average.

This isn’t just about AI tools

Here’s the argument I want to make, and it’s one the salary tables alone won’t tell you: the PPC salary divergence isn’t primarily about AI skills versus no AI skills.

AI has dropped from No. 1 to No. 3 among PPC professionals’ priorities, the State of PPC 2026 report found. Not because adoption declined, but because it became table stakes. AI saves practitioners an average of 5.2 hours per week. Genuinely useful, but not a salary lever on its own.

The discrepancy is about positioning. Payscale’s 2026 Compensation Best Practices Report found that 55% of companies offer no premium, bonus, raise, or equity for employees who have built out their AI skill set, despite 61% of those same organizations rewriting job descriptions to require those competencies. AI fluency is becoming an expectation, not a differentiator.

The practitioners pulling away from the pack have repositioned from campaign operators to business outcome owners. They:

  • Speak in revenue contribution and margin impact, not ROAS and CTR.
  • Sit closer to the CFO than to the media buyer.
  • Have made that expertise visible, through the way they communicate, the frameworks they bring to client conversations, and the questions they ask in board meetings.

The salary data tells you what happened. The positioning question determines which part of the distribution you end up in.

The question to ask yourself

The PPC salary curve isn’t collapsing. But it branches out.

  • The 3-5 years cohort is actually doing reasonably well.
  • Freelancers with 10+ years of experience and strong positioning are commanding $200,000+ in the U.S.
  • Senior in-house strategists are clearing $140,000-$170,000.

What’s stagnating is the middle: the agency practitioner with 6-15 years of experience who has become good at running campaigns but hasn’t repositioned what they bring to the table.

That cohort is being squeezed from below by automation absorbing execution work, and from above by a narrowing set of senior roles that require something more than campaign competence.

Stop asking “am I using AI?” and start asking a harder question: am I still the most important person in the room when the AI report lands?

If the honest answer is no, or you’re not sure, that’s not a tooling problem. It’s a positioning problem. And the salary data suggests the time to address it is now, before the gap between the two sides of this curve becomes impossible to close.

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