Skip to main content

Salary by state

MBA-Relevant Salary in Texas

What the roles MBAs target actually pay in Texas — source-labeled BLS wage benchmarks, with the geographic caveats that matter.

Direct answer
Across the 8 MBA-relevant occupations with published wages in Texas, median annual pay spans roughly $99k–$258k. The highest-median role here is Chief Executives at $257,850. These are BLS occupational wage benchmarks across all workers — not MBA-graduate-specific outcomes — but they show what a path can pay in Texas.

Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) (May 2024 estimates (published April 2025)), Texas state estimates. Occupational wage benchmarks across all workers, not MBA-specific outcomes. Accessed via the BLS public API.

Roles benchmarked
8
MBA-relevant occupations
Median wage span
$99k–$258k
across roles in Texas
Highest median
$257,850
Chief Executives
Region
South
U.S. census region

What MBA-relevant roles pay in Texas

Median, mean, and employment for the occupations MBAs commonly target in Texas. These are occupational wage benchmarks, not MBA-specific salaries.

Role (occupation)Median annualMean annualEmployment
Chief Executives
SOC 11-1011
$257,850$310,6608,780
Computer and Information Systems Managers
SOC 11-3021
$171,530$181,50073,060
Financial Managers
SOC 11-3031
$164,860$180,17071,870
Marketing Managers
SOC 11-2021
$147,880$159,81044,680
Medical and Health Services Managers
SOC 11-9111
$114,150$128,86058,420
General and Operations Managers
SOC 11-1021
$103,230$133,280431,310
Management Analysts
SOC 13-1111
$101,400$110,35050,990
Financial and Investment Analysts
SOC 13-2051
$99,150$110,92028,820
Broad benchmarkBLS OEWS · May 2024 estimates (published April 2025) · Texas

These are occupational wage benchmarks for roles MBA graduates commonly target — wage context across all workers, not verified MBA-specific outcomes.

Source: BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics ↗

Compare other states

Geography, cost of living, and Texas pay

Nominal wages in Texas reflect its industry concentration and cost of living. A higher headline number in a high-cost state does not automatically mean a better financial outcome — housing, taxes, and everyday costs claim more of it. Weigh any state wage against local living costs before drawing a conclusion.

Because these are occupational benchmarks across all workers, an MBA can shift where you land within — or above — a role's range through the school network, function, and seniority you target. Use the MBA ROI calculator to model your own expected pay, debt, and payback in Texas.

Frequently asked questions

What do MBA-relevant roles pay in Texas?

Across the 8 MBA-relevant occupations benchmarked for Texas, median annual wages span roughly $99k–$258k. These are BLS OEWS occupational wage benchmarks across all workers in Texas, not MBA-graduate-specific outcomes. The highest-median role here is Chief Executives at $257,850.

Are these Texas figures MBA-specific salaries?

No. They are occupational wage benchmarks from the BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) program for roles MBAs commonly target. They describe what those occupations pay across all workers in Texas, regardless of degree. Verified MBA-specific outcomes are collected separately and shown only once they clear our sample-size gates.

Why does MBA pay differ between Texas and other states?

Two forces drive most of the geographic difference: the industry mix of the state (finance, consulting, and tech hubs lift nominal pay) and cost of living (higher-pay states usually cost more to live in, offsetting part of the gap). Always weigh a state wage against its living costs — the ROI calculator lets you model take-home value directly.

Related searches

Every figure on SalaryMBA is source-labeled. See our methodology for how we source and gate data.