India’s Gender Pay Gap Narrows Sharply, Now Among the World’s Smallest: Deel
Deel, a
global HR and payroll company, released its annual State of Global
Compensation Report 2025, in partnership with Carta, an equity
management platform.
Drawing on Deel’s vast
internal platform data, spanning over 1 million contracts and 35,000+ customers
across more than 150 countries, the report delivers in-depth insights on global
pay trends, helping companies and employees benchmark compensation accurately.
By leveraging such a broad and dense dataset, organizations can make more
transparent, equitable, and data-driven pay decisions, across international
teams.
Key global and India takeaways include:
- Compensation leaders remain
unchanged:
The US ($95K - $150K), UK ($82K - $117K), and Canada ($73K - $121K)
continue to offer the highest median compensation globally across job
categories.
- AI job specialization accelerates: Specialized
roles in AI, cybersecurity, and digital marketing command 20% to 25% pay
premiums due to skill scarcity and lack of established pay benchmarks.
- Equity grants for tech talent are
consistently rising: Median equity grants for tech talent, as a
share of company ownership, have grown consistently from 2021 to 2025,
particularly in emerging markets like Brazil and India, marking a global
shift toward equity-heavy compensation models. The US leads in equity
package size, followed by Canada and France.
- Contractor hiring strategies
shift: Argentina, Mexico, and Brazil now offer
extensive contractor talent pools (80-90% of workers), while the US and
Germany remain Full-time Equivalent (FTE) centric. India continues to show
a hybrid workforce model, with 60%-70% full-time employees and 30% - 40%
contract workers, underscoring steady reliance on flexible work
arrangements.
- Gender pay gaps persist in tech
and leadership: Gender pay gaps remain starker in tech and
product roles compared to sales positions, where some improvements have
been observed. The largest gaps are observed in Canada, France, and the
United States. India stands out for having one of the smallest gaps globally, with median
salaries for men and women nearly equal, both ranging between 13K and 23K,
depending on role and function.
- Median compensation plummets in
India: Engineering and data professionals in India
saw their median pay drop from $36K in 2024 to $22K in 2025 - a 40%
decline, despite expectations of salary hikes. In contrast, the US
recorded an increase from $122K to $150K over the same period.
“It’s encouraging to see India emerge as one of the
few countries where the gender pay gap has narrowed significantly. Median
salaries for men and women now stand nearly equal, both ranging between $13K
and $23K, marking one of the smallest gender pay gaps globally,” says Mark
Samlal, General Manager APAC at Deel. "This progress reflects a broader
shift toward fairness, transparency, and data-driven compensation models that
reward merit over bias.”

































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