50–70%
Of resigning candidates in competitive tech markets receive a counter offer
80%
Of people who accept a counter offer leave within 6 months anyway
29%
Of counter-offer acceptors stay longer than 12 months
10–30%
Typical salary bump offered in a counter offer

Why Counter Offers Happen — and Why They Often Don't Work

Resignation triggers panic retention. Replacing you costs the company recruiting time, ramp-up time, and project risk — so a raise looks cheap by comparison in the moment. But a counter offer addresses the symptom (you're about to leave) without necessarily addressing the cause (why you wanted to leave in the first place). That's the core reason the data skews so heavily toward people leaving anyway, just delayed by a few months.

Original Reason for LeavingDoes a Counter Offer Actually Fix It?
Pure compensation gapOften yes, if the raise genuinely closes the market gap and isn't a one-time bump
Lack of growth / stuck roleRarely — a raise without a real scope change just delays the same frustration
Bad manager / toxic teamAlmost never — the structural problem persists regardless of pay
Boredom / no technical challengeRarely — unless paired with an actual project/team change
Better brand/title for career trajectoryNo — your current company can't retroactively give you the new company's brand
The One Question That Cuts Through Most Counter-Offer Confusion Ask yourself honestly: "If this raise/promotion had been offered to me last month, before I even started interviewing, would I have been satisfied and stopped looking?" If yes, the counter offer may genuinely solve your problem. If no — if you would have kept job-hunting even with that money — the counter offer is just delaying your eventual exit.

A Decision Framework

  1. Write down your actual reasons for leaving before the counter offer conversation happens — compensation, growth, manager, work content, commute, whatever it is. Do this before you're influenced by a number.
  2. Map each reason against what's actually on the table. A raise fixes compensation. It rarely fixes a bad manager or a stagnant role unless explicitly paired with a structural change (new team, new manager, new scope, in writing).
  3. Compare to the new offer's full picture — not just salary, but team, tech stack, brand value, growth ceiling, and whether you were excited about the move for reasons beyond pay.
  4. Ask for specifics, not promises. "We'll figure out a path to promotion" is not a counter offer — get a written commitment with a timeline if a promotion is part of the deal.
  5. Give yourself 24–48 hours before deciding. Counter offers are designed to create urgency; don't let that urgency replace your own judgment.

Scripts for the Conversation

If You've Decided to Decline the Counter Offer
I've thought about this carefully, and I appreciate you working to put something together. But this decision isn't only about compensation — it's about [growth/role/team — be specific if comfortable]. I've committed to the new opportunity and I'd like to focus on a smooth transition over my notice period.
If You're Genuinely Reconsidering
I want to be transparent: I'm seriously considering this, but I need clarity on a few things before I decide — specifically [the promotion timeline / the new project assignment / the team change]. Can we get that in writing so I can make a fully informed decision?
Watch Out For This Specific India Pattern In Indian IT, it's common for a counter offer to come bundled with pressure around notice period — e.g., "stay and we'll also waive your remaining notice obligations" or implicit pressure tied to ongoing projects/appraisals. Separate the compensation decision from any notice-period leverage being used on you; these are two different negotiations.

If You Accept the New Offer Anyway

Resign cleanly and professionally regardless of how the counter-offer conversation goes — Indian tech is a small world, and managers move between companies. Don't burn the relationship over a counter offer you declined; you may work with these people again, refer candidates to each other, or even rejoin years later. See our notice period negotiation guide if you need to manage an exit timeline alongside this.