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NALP has completed its seventh annual comprehensive survey of associate
compensation with the 2001 Associate Salary Survey report. Over 650 offices
representing large and small firms alike (about one quarter of responses were
from firms of 50 or fewer attorneys, and a similar percentage were from firms of
more than 500 attorneys) provided salary information as of April 1, 2001.
The median salary for first-year associates ranged from $60,000 in firms of
2-25 attorneys to $115,000 in firms of 500 attorneys or more, with a first-year
median for all participating firms of $95,000. A comparison with figures
reported 12 months earlier, as of April 2000, reveals that first-year salaries
have remained stable in firms of 251 or more attorneys, with a median of just
over $110,000. This is in sharp contrast to a 30% increase in the median during
the previous 12-month period, from April 1999 to April 2000. In some major
cities, such as Los Angeles, New York City, and the Silicon Valley area, the
prevailing salary of $125,000 for first-year associates remained unchanged from
April 2000.
As expected, each year of associate experience brings several thousand
dollars in increased compensation: median salaries for eighth-year associates
ranged from $90,000 in small firms to $175,000 in the largest firms, with a
median for all participating firms of $130,000.
The volume of data allowed analyses for 33 individual cites as well as many
additional states and regions not encompassed by those cities. These analyses
reveal a wide range of law firm compensation. For example, the median salary for
first-year associates in all firms of over 251 attorneys was highest in the
West, at $125,000, followed by $105,000 in the Northeast and $100,000 in the
Midwest and South. The typical high salary reported was $135,000. The typical
salary for first-year associates in large firms stood at $125,000 in a number of
cities, not just New York, but also Chicago, Los Angeles, Orange County, CA, San
Diego, San Francisco, the San Jose area, and Washington, D.C. In contrast,
medians in Detroit, Hartford, and Tampa were in the $80,000-82,000 range.
Contrasts between large cities and smaller metropolitan areas are also evident.
For example, for firms reporting from areas of California (outside the Los
Angeles, Orange County, CA, San Diego, San Francisco, the San Jose areas), the
first-year median was $72,500.
More limited data on salaries for intellectual property attorneys suggest
that IP attorneys command a premium of about $20,000. Salaries for staff
attorneys are typically $81,000 per year, while law clerks average $30 per hour.
The survey also reports on bonus systems at participating firms and the
prevalence and size of bonuses for prior judicial clerks. Among the findings
regarding bonus systems: about 70% of firms use a discretionary basis as one
means of determining eligibility for bonuses. Many firms (64%) use "meeting
fixed goals" as a determinant of eligibility — 40% of small firms consider this
factor, while over 80% of the largest firms do so. Bonus amounts were based on
various factors, the most common of which were merit/performance (73% of offices
offering associate bonuses), billable hours (71%), and discretion (50%). About
one third of the firms reported paying a bonus to prior judicial clerks, with
large firms most likely to offer bonuses. Bonuses of $5,000-15,000 were most
typical.
Median Base Salaries by Associate Year and Firm Size (as of
April 1, 2001)
| Associate Year |
FIRM SIZE - Number of
Attorneys |
| 2-25 |
26-50 |
51-100 |
101-250 |
251-500 |
501 or more |
All Sizes |
| First |
$60,000 |
$70,500 |
$75,900 |
$90,000 |
$108,750 |
$115,000 |
$95,000 |
| Second |
65,000 |
75,000 |
80,000 |
93,000 |
111,569 |
120,000 |
97,500 |
| Third |
70,500 |
77,000 |
85,000 |
96,500 |
118,334 |
127,484 |
101,000 |
| Fourth |
76,000 |
82,375 |
89,000 |
102,000 |
127,059 |
140,000 |
110,000 |
| Fifth |
80,000 |
84,000 |
93,000 |
106,000 |
136,863 |
150,000 |
113,750 |
| Sixth |
84,500 |
88,000 |
95,000 |
110,000 |
145,000 |
160,000 |
120,000 |
| Seventh |
87,500 |
92,000 |
100,500 |
115,000 |
151,600 |
170,000 |
126,000 |
| Eighth |
90,000 |
85,000 |
104,000 |
120,000 |
143,000 |
175,000 |
130,000 |
| Summer (weekly): |
| First-year summer |
856 |
1,000 |
1,400 |
1,640 |
2,000 |
2,300 |
1,825 |
| Second-year summer |
950 |
1,100 |
1,392 |
1,675 |
2,100 |
2,300 |
1,800 |
| Third-year summer |
938 |
1,000 |
1,384 |
1,753 |
2,108 |
2,400 |
2,000 |
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