National Geographic Editor Salary | Comparably
National Geographic is a magazine that contains articles and images on geography, archaeology, natural science, world culture, and history. read more
EMPLOYEE
PARTICIPANTS
74
TOTAL
RATINGS
497

National Geographic Editor Salary

The average National Geographic Editor earns an estimated $90,085 annually. National Geographic's Editor compensation is $16,378 more than the US average for a Editor.

The Marketing Department at National Geographic earns $1,034 more on average than the IT Department.

Last updated 21 days ago.

$21k
$35k
$50k
$65k
$180k
$394k
$90,085
Average Compensation
$90,085
avg. base

Editor Salaries at National Geographic

Editors earn $8,397 more than Content Managers, and $35,555 less than Senior Marketing Managers.

Director of Marketing
$186k*
Senior Marketing Manager
$126k*
Content Manager
$82k*
Data Analyst
$80k*
Copywriter
$78k*
Email Marketer
$78k*
Business Analyst
$77k*
Community Manager
$77k*
Social Media Manager
$77k*
SEM Manager
$76k*
Marketing Associate
$50k*
* estimated salary

Compensation at National Geographic by Department

The Marketing Department averages $1,034 more than the IT Department, and $10,946 less than the Design Department

Design
$111,550 Avg. total comp.
+$11k
Marketing
$100,604 Avg. total comp.
IT
$99,570 Avg. total comp.
-$1k

Editor Compensation by Gender (All Companies)

The average female Editor at companies similar size to National Geographic reported making $86,650, while the average male Editor at similar sized companies reported making $72,357.

Editor Compensation by Ethnicity (All Companies)

The average Native American Editor at companies similar size to National Geographic reported making $97,000, while the average Asian or Pacific Islander Editor at similar sized companies reported making $57,750.

How Editors at National Geographic Rate Their Compensation

The majority of Editors at National Geographic believe they're compensated fairly. 33% of Editors at National Geographic say they receive annual bonuses, and the majority (68%) are satisfied with their benefits. See more compensation ratings at National Geographic

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