Lead · 2026 Salary Report

Lead Urban and Regional Planner Salary in the US (2026)

Lead Urban and Regional Planner roles in the United States earn about $143,505 per year, with a modeled range from $104,500 to $144,000. This guide explains what the level means, how pay changes by location and industry, and how to move toward the next salary band.

📅 Updated April 2026📊 BLS percentile-modeled salary data🎓 Experience level: 10+ years⏱ 13 min read
Average Salary
$144K
lead, USA
Lowest Range
$105K
lower wage band
Highest Range
$161K
upper wage band
Monthly Avg
$12.0K
before tax
vs. Role Avg
+54%
overall Urban and Regional Planner avg
Hourly Rate
$112
full-time equivalent
Salary figures projected to 2026  from May 2024 BLS OEWS baseline·   Projections use wage history, employment outlook, and tech-market signals where available
You are here — Career Progression Track
Entry Level ($62.0K)Mid Level ($93.4K)Senior Level ($117K)Lead / Principal ($144K)
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Lead Urban and Regional Planner Salary in the US — 2026 Overview

At the lead level, Urban and Regional Planner compensation is shaped by the role’s responsibility band, local market, employer type, and skill requirements. The benchmark here is modeled from BLS wage percentiles because BLS does not publish experience labels directly.

Methodology Note Lead salary uses the Derived from BLS OEWS percentile bands. Experience labels are modeled, not directly reported by BLS..

What "Lead" Means for Urban and Regional Planner

Lead is best understood as a responsibility band, not just a number of years. Employers use it to describe autonomy, ownership, mentoring expectations, and the complexity of work assigned.

Entry Level
0-2 years
$62.0K
Range: $62.0K-$73.9K
  • Supported by senior teammates
  • Builds role fundamentals
  • Executes assigned scope
Mid Level
3-5 years
$93.4K
Range: $73.9K-$117K
  • More independent ownership
  • Builds role fundamentals
  • Executes assigned scope
Senior Level
6-10 years
$117K
Range: $93.4K-$144K
  • More independent ownership
  • Mentors others
  • Executes assigned scope
Lead / Principal
10+ years
$144K
Range: $117K-$161K
  • More independent ownership
  • Mentors others
  • Sets direction and priorities

Salary by Years of Experience — Lead Breakdown

Pay still changes inside a level. These estimates distribute the lead wage band across likely tenure points so readers can see what early and late-stage compensation may look like.

Start
$118K
Early
$129K
Core
$144K
Strong
$155K
Promotion-ready
$166K

Lead vs. All Urban and Regional Planner Experience Levels

This ladder shows where the lead band sits inside the full urban and regional planner pay path. The current benchmark of $143,505 is most useful when compared with the overall role median of $93,423.0, because some occupations compress pay early while others widen more sharply at senior and lead levels.

Entry Level
$62.0K
Mid Level
$93.4K
Senior Level
$117K
Lead / Principal
$144K
LevelYears Exp.Avg Base SalaryRangevs Current
Entry Level0-2 years$62,044.0$62.0K - $73.9K-57%
Mid Level3-5 years$93,401.0$73.9K - $117K-35%
Senior Level6-10 years$116,611$93.4K - $144K-19%
Lead / Principal10+ years$143,505$117K - $161K+0%

Lead Urban and Regional Planner Salary by Location

Location remains one of the strongest pay levers for lead Urban and Regional Planner roles. In this comparison, San Jose, CA leads the table at about $204,882, which gives you a clearer benchmark for where this level pays best.

CityEstimated Lead SalaryMedian Role SalaryCost Signal
San Jose, CA$204,882$133,380High salary market
District Of Columbia$199,306$129,750High salary market
San Francisco, CA$198,768$129,400High salary market
Vallejo, CA$188,246$122,550High salary market
Santa Rosa, CA$187,309$121,940High salary market
Napa, CA$187,017$121,750High salary market
Santa Cruz, CA$167,432$109,000High salary market
Rochester, NY$166,142$108,160High salary market
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Lead Urban and Regional Planner Salary by Industry

Industry premiums are often one of the clearest reasons two people at the same level earn different pay. At the lead stage, sectors such as Utilities usually pay more when the work is tied to revenue, infrastructure, regulated operations, or harder-to-source expertise.

IndustryEstimated Lead SalaryReference SalaryGrowth Speed
Utilities$187,417$122,010Fast
Construction$160,090$104,220Fast
Professional, Scientific, and Technical Services$137,371$89,430.0Fast
Government Excluding Schools, Hospitals, and Postal Service$127,325$82,890.0Moderate
Government, Schools, Hospitals, and Postal Service$127,295$82,870.0Moderate
Other Services Except Public Administration$122,318$79,630.0Moderate
Educational Services$119,614$77,870.0Moderate
Real Estate, Rental, and Leasing$118,217$76,960.0Moderate

Typical Lead Urban and Regional Planner Responsibilities

Common at this level
  • Design, promote, or administer government plans or policies affecting land use, zoning, public utilities, community facilities, housing, or transportation.
  • Advise planning officials on project feasibility, cost-effectiveness, regulatory conformance, or possible alternatives.
  • Create, prepare, or requisition graphic or narrative reports on land use data, including land area maps overlaid with geographic variables, such as population density.
Next-level signals
  • Job Zone Five: Extensive Preparation Needed
  • Most of these occupations require graduate school. For example, they may require a master's degree, and some require a Ph.D., M.D., or J.D. (law degree).
  • Employees may need some on-the-job training, but most of these occupations assume that the person will already have the required skills, knowledge, work-related experience, and/or training.

Promotion Timeline from Lead

1
Build proof
0-6 months
Show consistent delivery at the current level.
2
Expand scope
6-12 months
Take on larger work and document impact.
3
Negotiate level
12-24 months
Use market data to move toward higher-level roles.

How to Enter This Level

1
Education baseline
Start with the most common baseline credential O*NET associates with this role.
Most of these occupations require graduate school. For example, they may require a master's degree, and some require a Ph.D., M.D., or J.D. (law degree).
2
Training path
Use this as the practical ramp into employer workflows, tools, and standards.
Employees may need some on-the-job training, but most of these occupations assume that the person will already have the required skills, knowledge, work-related experience, and/or training.
3
Core tools
These tools show what this role is commonly paired with in the O*NET stack.
Autodesk AutoCAD, Microsoft PowerPoint, ESRI ArcGIS software, and Geomechanical design analysis GDA software
4
Move-up signal
This gives a realistic view of the preparation depth employers often associate with the role.
Job Zone Five: Extensive Preparation Needed

Lead Urban and Regional Planner Remote vs Onsite Pay

Remote and hybrid work can change the salary range within an experience band because employers may be pricing the role against a broader labor market than a single local office. Where direct remote compensation data is available, it is used below; otherwise the fallback rows stay anchored to the current level’s salary benchmark.

Work TypeAvg. BaseExperienceMarket FitFlexibility
Remote$143,505LeadNational hiring poolHigh
Hybrid$147,810LeadMetro and office mixMedium
Onsite$144,940LeadLocation-dependent teamsLower

At the lead level, remote access can matter as much as raw salary because it widens employer choice and can accelerate movement into stronger-paying markets before a full relocation.

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Best Salary Locations for Lead Urban and Regional Planner

Location remains one of the strongest salary levers at this stage. The markets at the top of this list usually combine deeper employer demand, stronger industry concentration, and more competition for workers who already meet lead expectations. In this guide, San Jose, CA leads the ranking at about $204,882, which makes it the clearest benchmark for what this level can command in a stronger-paying market.

1
San Jose, CA
$205K
2
District Of Columbia
$199K
3
San Francisco, CA
$199K
4
Vallejo, CA
$188K
5
Santa Rosa, CA
$187K
6
Napa, CA
$187K
7
Santa Cruz, CA
$167K
8
Rochester, NY
$166K

Factors That Affect Lead Urban and Regional Planner Pay

Pay variation inside one experience level usually comes from a small group of repeating factors: location, employer type, specialization, and how much ownership the role actually carries. These are the biggest reasons one lead urban and regional planner can sit near the bottom of the band while another lands much closer to the top.

Years of Experience
Salary usually rises as the role moves from entry-level execution to independent ownership, mentoring, and broader decision-making.
Location and Cost of Living
Local salary ranges vary by labor market, employer density, and household-income context.
Industry
Industry pay can vary when employers in higher-margin or harder-to-staff sectors compete for the same occupation.
Specialized Skills
O*NET marks high-demand role-specific skills as relevant skills for this role, making them useful anchors for specialization and salary-growth content.

How to Earn More as a Lead Urban and Regional Planner

Salary growth at this level usually comes from clearer proof, better market positioning, and stronger specialization rather than time alone. The tactics below are the most practical ways to move pay closer to the upper end of the lead band before the next formal promotion step.

1
Benchmark against stronger markets
Compare national, metro, and industry salary facts before negotiating so your target range is grounded in current wage data.
1-3 months timeline
2
Build a visible specialization
Prioritize skills such as high-demand role-specific skills; O*NET relevance scores make these good first candidates for portfolio and resume positioning.
3-9 months timeline
3
Target higher-paying industries
Use industry salary facts to identify sectors that already pay above the occupation baseline.
2-6 months timeline

Career Path After Lead

One experience band only makes sense when you can see what comes after it. This path helps show how pay can move once the current level turns into broader responsibility, more complex work, or a role with higher organizational impact.

Intern / Trainee
$56.9K
Step 1
Junior
$68.7K
Step 2
Mid Level
$83.7K
Step 3
Senior
$102K
Step 4
Lead
$121K
Step 5
Principal / Architect
$144K
Step 6
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FAQs — Lead Urban and Regional Planner Salary

These questions usually come up when readers try to connect one experience band to the next. They help clarify how this level is modeled, what moves the range, and how to think about the jump toward the next salary step.

What is the average lead Urban and Regional Planner salary?
The modeled average is $143,505 per year in the United States.
Is this experience data directly labeled by BLS?
No. BLS publishes wage percentiles, and Careerclev maps those percentiles to experience levels with a clear methodology note.
How long does it take to move beyond lead?
Most workers move toward higher-level roles after showing broader scope, stronger output, and market-ready proof.
What is the salary range for lead Urban and Regional Planner roles?
Lead Urban and Regional Planner roles in this guide run from about $116,611 to $160,689, with the midpoint near $143,505.
Can location change lead Urban and Regional Planner pay a lot?
Yes. City and state market differences can move lead Urban and Regional Planner pay well above or below the national modeled average, especially in stronger employer hubs.
Do skills affect lead Urban and Regional Planner salary at this stage?
Yes. Specialized skills, stronger tools, and work tied to high-value outcomes can move compensation closer to the top of the lead pay band.
What is the best way to move from lead to higher-level roles?
The usual path is to show more independent delivery, clearer business impact, and readiness for broader ownership than the current level requires.
Is remote work good for lead Urban and Regional Planner roles?
It can be. Remote and hybrid access can widen employer choice and sometimes let workers reach stronger-paying markets before relocating.
🔬
Data Sources & MethodologyExperience salary pages use BLS OEWS wage facts and Careerclev salary experience bands. Experience levels are modeled from percentile wages because BLS does not publish direct entry, mid, senior, or lead labels.
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