RateOrchard
Industry Profile · California

Computer Programmers salary in Finance and insurance, California

Banks, investment firms, insurance carriers, and securities exchanges.

Adrian Serafin, founder and editor of RateOrchardBy Adrian SerafinFounderUpdated May 5, 2026
Real disclosed salaries

Computer Programmers (Finance) in California: actual employer-disclosed pay

Public records from 5 certified H-1B Labor Condition Applications filed with the U.S. Department of Labor. Median offered wage: $126,693. Every figure below is an actual offered salary an employer attested to under federal law.

By DOL wage level

DOL classifies every offer into one of four wage levels based on the role's experience and skill requirements.

LevelFilingsMedian offer
Level I — entry2$95,627
Level II — qualified2$126,697
Level IV — fully competent1$136,698

Top employers filing for this role

Companies with the most certified filings for Computer Programmers (Finance) in California. Median offer is across all of that employer's filings.

EmployerMost-filed titleFilingsMedian
Overflow App IncSoftware Programmer2$126,697
Ally BankPrincipal “ Software Eng1$136,698
Aurfy Inc.Computer Programmer1$101,254
Checkbook Inc.Technical Compliance & Risk Analyst1$90,000

Recent sample filings

A snapshot of recent certified offers. Each line is a real, public, verifiable record.

  • Software Programmer at Overflow App Inc
    $126,700
    Mountain ViewWage Level IIDecided Jun 24, 2025I-200-25167-096899
  • Principal “ Software Eng at Ally Bank
    $136,698
    Los AngelesWage Level IVDecided Jun 18, 2025I-200-25162-079497
  • Computer Programmer at Aurfy Inc.
    $101,254
    Santa ClaraWage Level IDecided Jun 12, 2025I-200-25156-058656
  • Technical Compliance & Risk Analyst at Checkbook Inc.
    $90,000
    San MateoWage Level IDecided Jun 3, 2025I-200-25147-022247
  • Software Engineer I at Overflow App Inc
    $126,693
    Mountain ViewWage Level IIDecided Jun 16, 2025I-200-25161-072121

Source: U.S. Department of Labor, Office of Foreign Labor Certification. Disclosed wages reflect what employers attested to pay; actual paid wages may differ. Only certified filings are shown — denied and withdrawn cases are excluded.