...
...
Next Story

Satya Nadella gets nearly $100 million salary in ‘exceptional year’ for Microsoft

Satya Nadella's salary has jumped because he and his leadership team “have positioned Microsoft as a clear AI leader for this generational technology shift”.

Updated on: Oct 22, 2025 03:47 PM IST
Advertisement

Satya Nadella's salary has jumped to the highest since he became Microsoft Corp.'s chief executive officer more than a decade ago, thanks to the progress the company has seen in AI and the valuation boost that's come with it.

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella. (File Photo)
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella. (File Photo)

The India-born Microsoft CEO will draw a total compensation of $96.5 million in Fiscal 2025 as against $79.1 million in Fiscal 2024, as “Satya Nadella and his leadership team have positioned Microsoft as a clear AI leader for this generational technology shift”, the company wrote in a shareholder note included in its annual report released on Tuesday.

About 90% of Nadella’s compensation, which includes a $2.5 million salary, is in Microsoft shares, the company said in the filing. Microsoft Chief Financial Officer Amy Hood's total compensation has increased to $29.5 million. Chief Commercial Officer Judson Althoff will receive a pay package of $28.2 million.

How Satya Nadella's pay package has evolved

Nadella, who joined Microsoft in 1992, drew a total compensation of $84.3 million when he became the company's third only CEO after Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer in 2014, thanks to stock awards of $79.77 million.

“During his tenure as CEO, Microsoft's cumulative total shareholder return through 30 June 2025 was over 1500% and market capitalisation increased by almost $3.4 trillion,” according to the annual report.

A look at how Satya Nadella's pay has evolved since he became Microsoft CEO in 2014.

How Satya Nadella's salary compares with US CEOs

To be sure, Nadella isn't the highest paid CEO in the US—he is among the Top 5—but his pay far outstrips the median CEO salary in the US.

According to the 2025 Equilar | Associated Press CEO Pay Study, the median CEO compensation at an S&P 500 company was $17.1 million. In comparison, the Top 10 CEOs by salary in the US have a median pay of roughly $50 million, according to the Visual Capitalist.

The primary reason for the “wealth gap” among the CEOs is compensation by way of stocks—equity awards made up about 75% of total CEO pay in 2024, according to the Equilar AP study. That's down to how much shareholder value a CEO generates for the company.

At nearly $100 million, Satya Nadella is still not the highest paid CEO in the US.

CEO Pay vs Employee Salary

The “wealth gap” is most visible when a CEO's pay is compared with that an employee at an S&P 500 company.

According to a Harvard Law study, at $17.1 million, an S&P 500 CEO earned 192 times the median employee salary of $85,419 in 2024. That ratio in fact worsened from 186:1 in 2023. At Microsoft, the ratio stands at 480:1.

There's a reason why CEOs earn “a pay package” and employees a “salary”.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Tushar Deep Singh

Tushar Deep Singh is a business journalist and digital editorial leader with 12 years of experience in financial journalism. Currently Assistant Editor at Hindustan Times, he is building the HT Business vertical and managing the newsletters for both Livemint and HT. When not in the newsroom, he can be found on a motorcycle. Throughout his career, Tushar has been instrumental in scaling digital publishing operations at some of India’s largest financial news websites. His six-year tenure at Mint—the first job—saw him plunge into online media to deliver record-breaking digital engagement for Livemint.com, including 7.2 million page views on 2017 UP Election Results day. He held fort at Livemint during a senior-level leadership transition later that year. That won him the HT Media Star Award (Bronze) in 2017 and a Certificate of Appreciation for Editorial Excellence in 2018. As the head of the digital desk at ETtech, he curated two daily, full-stack newsletters from an editorial as well as product perspective. At NDTV Profit, he transitioned from website editor to principal correspondent, reporting on the auto sector for the TV channel and website, thereby adding yet another layer to his editorial expertise. He is a post-graduate in journalism from Xavier Institute of Communications, Mumbai, and a graduate from St. Xavier's College, Ahmedabad.

SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON