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Why 2 Nearly Identical Remote Jobs Can Pay Completely Different Amounts
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Why 2 Nearly Identical Remote Jobs Can Pay Completely Different Amounts
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by Rat Race Rebellion May 24, 2026
You’ve probably seen it. Two job postings – same title, nearly the same description, same listed responsibilities. One pays $19 an hour. The other pays $31. Neither posting explains why, and on paper there’s no obvious reason one should be worth 60% more than the other.
It’s tempting to assume the higher one is a fluke, or that the lower one is a scam, or that you’re just unlucky in what you’re seeing. Usually it’s none of those things.
The gap is real, it’s explainable, and once you understand what’s driving it, you start reading job postings differently – not chasing the big number, but recognizing which kind of job you’re actually looking at.
The Job Title Tells You Almost Nothing
The first thing to let go of is the idea that the job title means something fixed. “Customer Support Specialist” is not a defined unit of work the way “registered nurse” or “CPA” is. It’s a label – and two companies can attach it to genuinely different jobs.
At one company, the role is answering scripted questions from a queue, with a tight handle-time target and a manager watching a dashboard. At another, the same title means handling escalations, writing help documentation, and occasionally jumping on calls with frustrated enterprise clients. Both postings say “customer support.” Only one of them is actually entry-level work. The pay gap isn’t unfair – it’s the market quietly pricing two different jobs that happen to share a name.
Before you compare two numbers, confirm you’re comparing the same job. Read past the title into the day-to-day responsibilities, and you’ll often find the higher-paying role is asking for more than the lower one let on.
Where the Company Sets Its Pay From
Here’s the part that’s specific to remote work, and it trips up almost everyone.
When a company hires remotely, it has to decide what market it’s pricing the role against. There are a few common approaches, and they produce wildly different numbers for the same work.
A smaller set of companies still pay based on where the company is headquartered. A firm based in San Francisco or New York might pay the rate that market commands regardless of where the employee lives, which, if you’re in a lower-cost area, can mean a remote role that pays far more than anything local. These roles are out there and worth knowing about, but they’re now the exception rather than the rule. Most large employers have moved toward location-based bands, so don’t assume a remote posting will pay its headquarters’ rate. Some will. Many won’t.
Others pay based on where you live. This is what’s often called location-adjusted or geo-banded pay. The company decides what the role is worth in your metro area and prices accordingly. The same job at the same company can pay one number for someone in Austin and a different number for someone in a rural county three states over. The company isn’t being cheap – it’s applying a formula. But it means two people doing identical work can earn meaningfully different amounts.
And some companies use a single national rate – one number for the role no matter where you sit. This is increasingly common with large customer-facing operations that hire at scale and don’t want the administrative headache of fifty pay bands.
None of these is hidden malice. They’re just three different philosophies, and a job seeker comparing two postings is usually looking at companies that have made different choices without saying so. The higher number isn’t always the better deal – it sometimes just reflects a more expensive market you don’t live in.
Margins Decide What a Role Is Allowed to Cost
A second invisible factor: not every company can afford to pay the same, and it has little to do with generosity.
A role that directly generates revenue – sales, anything tied to client retention, specialized technical work, etc., tends to be priced higher because the company can trace dollars back to the seat. A role the company sees as a cost center, something it has to staff but would automate tomorrow if it could, gets priced as a cost to be minimized. Customer support sits awkwardly across this line, which is exactly why support pay varies so much. At a company where support is the product experience, it’s funded well. At a company where support is a complaint department, it isn’t.
Industry margins matter too. Software companies, finance, and healthcare administration tend to have more room in the budget per employee than retail, hospitality, or thinly funded startups burning through investor money. The same job title inside a high-margin business and a low-margin one will not pay the same, because the businesses don’t have the same money to work with. A job’s pay says as much about the company’s economics as it does about the work itself.
What the Number on the Posting Leaves Out
Even when you find two roles that genuinely match, the headline rate isn’t the whole comparison – and this is where a lot of people make decisions they later regret.
The biggest one is employee versus contractor. A W-2 employee role at $24 an hour and a 1099 contractor role at $30 an hour aren’t priced on the same scale. A contractor covers both halves of self-employment tax and supplies their own benefits, equipment, and time off – so a chunk of that higher rate is meant to fund the things an employer would otherwise provide. That doesn’t make contract work a worse deal – plenty of people choose it for the flexibility, the ability to work with multiple clients, and the control over their own schedule, and the gross rate is often genuinely higher for good reason. It just means the two numbers aren’t directly comparable until you do the math. Set aside roughly 25–30% of a contract rate for taxes and benefits and you’ll be comparing like to like. The posting will rarely spell this out, so you have to know to look.
Then there’s everything bundled around the base rate – health coverage, retirement matching, paid leave, equipment, a stipend for internet or a home office. Two roles at the same hourly rate can differ by thousands of dollars a year once benefits are counted, and benefits almost never appear in the headline number. A modestly lower base with real health coverage frequently beats a higher base with none, especially if you’re insuring a family.
The advertised rate is the start of the comparison, not the end of it. The honest version of “what does this pay” includes tax treatment and benefits, and those are exactly the parts a job posting is least likely to make obvious.
The Bottom Line
Two nearly identical remote jobs can pay completely different amounts because the title is doing far less work than it looks like — and underneath it sits four things the posting doesn’t mention: whether it’s actually the same job, what market the company prices from, what the company’s margins allow, and what the number leaves out in taxes and benefits.
You don’t need to memorize pay bands or master negotiation tactics to use this. You just need to stop reading the headline rate as a clean measure of a job’s worth, and start reading it as one data point shaped by forces that have nothing to do with you. The people who navigate remote pay well aren’t the ones hunting for the biggest number. They’re the ones who can look at two postings and understand why the gap exists — and then decide which kind of job they actually want.
That’s a more useful skill than knowing any single salary figure, because it keeps working no matter what the market does next.
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