Want to know how the increased prevailing wage floors could affect your workforce? Skip the math. Our calculator applies the proposed multipliers to any SOC code, metro area, and wage level. Enter the role and location, and it returns the current floor, the proposed new floor, and the gap.
H-1B prevailing wage impact estimator
Occupation-specific floors with metro adjustment from the migrated WordPress tool.
SOC 15-1252. Metro adjustment uses the ratio of BLS OEWS May 2024 median wage in the selected metro to the median-of-medians across the migrated data set.
How to use the DOL prevailing wage calculator
Step 1: Start with national average wages from real H-1B filings
The calculator has a built-in database of average salaries that employers actually reported when they filed H-1B paperwork in recent years. These are national averages — meaning they combine all the wages reported across every city and state into a single baseline number for each occupation and experience level. For example, Computer Programmers at Level II have a national baseline of $88,143 based on thousands of actual Labor Condition Applications filed by employers.
Step 2: Adjust that national baseline for your specific metro area
Since a Software Developer in San Francisco earns much more than one in Atlanta, the calculator looks up the latest government wage data (BLS OEWS May 2024) to see how your metro compares to the national picture. It calculates a ratio: your metro's median wage for that job divided by the median-of-medians across 20 major metros. If San Francisco's ratio is 1.40, the calculator multiplies that $88,143 baseline by 1.40 to get your metro-adjusted current floor of about $123,400. This step adds back the geographic variation that was averaged away in Step 1.
Step 3: Estimate the proposed rule's impact using the same approach
The government's proposed rule would change how wage levels are calculated — specifically shifting Level II from the 34th percentile to the 52nd percentile of wages (about a 24-25% increase). The calculator applies those same percentage increases to the national baseline, then applies your metro ratio to that new number. So it's calculating: (national baseline × proposed rule multiplier × your metro ratio) to show what the new floor would be.
Step 4: Compare to what you're actually paying
Finally, the calculator takes the salary you enter and shows whether it clears the metro-adjusted current floor, the metro-adjusted proposed floor, both, or neither.
Important context: This tool projects wages under a DOL proposed rule published March 27, 2026 (91 FR 15454), which has not been finalized and is not currently in effect. Today's actual H-1B prevailing wage obligations remain at the existing 17th/34th/50th/67th percentile levels. The proposed rule may be finalized as proposed, modified, withdrawn, or set aside through litigation. The numbers here should not be used to assess current compliance.
About the Author

Senior Staff Writer
Myles Ma is a veteran editor and journalist who has spent his career untangling complicated, sometimes unpleasant topics to help readers make smarter decisions. His reporting and insights have been featured in major outlets including the Washington Post, PBS, and CNBC.
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Ana Gabriela Urizar is an award-winning immigration attorney licensed in Arizona and New York. With nearly a decade of experience, she advises global corporations on complex U.S. immigration matters. Originally from Guatemala, Ana Gabriela previously spent close to ten years at the world’s largest immigration firm, managing business immigration matters for leading technology, science, and financial companies. She has been recognized by Best Lawyers: Ones to Watch and Negocios Now’s Tri-State 40 Under 40.
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