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Tenure Comp Intelligence · Energy

Verified Energy pay in the Gulf. Every band with a paper trail.

35 verified Energy bands in UAE and Saudi. Source-counted, refreshed quarterly.

$299/mo · 14-day money-back guarantee · UAE and Saudi

Sample ladder · Energy

One representative band per seniority level. Full Energy coverage has 35 published bands.

RoleLevelLocationP25MedianP75n
HSE ManagerManagerRiyadh, SaudiSAR 35,360SAR 41,600SAR 47,840n=6
Senior Project Manager (Infrastructure)Senior ManagerRiyadh, SaudiSAR 58,565SAR 68,900SAR 79,235n=8
Head of Operations (Oil & Gas)DirectorAbu Dhabi, UAEAED 104,975AED 123,500AED 142,025n=5
CEO / Country ManagerC-LevelDubai, UAEAED 127,075AED 149,500AED 171,925n=8

What sets Energy pay in the Gulf

Energy in the Gulf splits into two tracks that share a labour market at the technical core. Oil & Gas covers the upstream and downstream engineering and operations ladder: petroleum, process, and drilling engineers, discipline leads, plant and asset managers, and the engineering and operations management above them. Power & Renewables covers the generation and project ladder: renewables and grid engineers, project and development managers, and the programme and renewables-development leadership building the region's solar, wind, and grid pipeline. The two tracks overlap heavily at the engineering and project-management grades, which is where the regional market is most active and where the Pay Index data is deepest.

Two forces shape band-setting. First, the structure of pay itself: the national and international operators run a base-plus-allowances package with housing, transport, education, and end-of-service benefit stacked on top, while the EPC and contracting side runs rotational day-rates and completion bonuses, so two engineers at the same grade can carry very different package shapes. Second, the regional energy transition: the Saudi and UAE renewables and grid pipeline pulls project and development managers and renewables engineers at growing rates, and the giga-project energy mandates add a mobility premium for project leadership.

Reference data in Gulf energy is fragmented across upstream specialist sources, contracting day-rate guides, and the newer renewables-sector benchmarks. The international engineering-recruitment guides ship wide ranges that blend operator and contractor structures. The Tenure Pay Index aggregates verified primary sources, separates oil and gas from power and renewables, separates the operator package from the contractor day-rate, and shows the source count on every band. Energy is the newest sector in the Index and the data is concentrated at the engineering and management core; the bands below reflect where the source depth is strongest, not a claim to full-ladder coverage.

Seniority ladder, UAE (monthly total cash, AED)

Level P25 Median P75 Sources
Manager AED 36,000 AED 42,500 AED 50,000 29
Senior Manager AED 50,000 AED 59,000 AED 69,500 2
Director AED 61,000 AED 72,000 AED 88,000 3

Bands aggregate the UAE energy cohort in the Tenure Pay Index across the oil and gas and power and renewables tracks. The Manager grade carries the deepest sample at 29 verified sources and is the most defensible reference in the sector, covering engineering and operations managers and the project and development managers on the renewables side. This is the core of the Gulf energy hiring market and the grade where the Pay Index data is strongest. The Senior Manager and Director grades sit at the limited-data threshold (2 and 3 sources) and are flagged in the dashboard pending the next refresh; the VP and chief-officer tier is published separately at the limited-data threshold and queued for refresh expansion. Energy is a deliberately narrow, data-honest sector: the Manager band carries the credibility, the senior tiers are flagged as thin, and the source count sits on every row so the comp team sees exactly where the data is deep and where it is not.

Who hires for energy in the Gulf

The national and international operators anchor the engineering and operations ladder across both markets, running the deepest benches of petroleum, process, and drilling engineers, discipline leads, and plant and asset managers. They pay a base-plus-allowances package with housing, transport, education, and end-of-service benefit, and the largest add LTIP at the senior management and chief-officer grade. The EPC contractors and engineering-services firms run the project-delivery side, hiring engineers and project managers on rotational day-rates and completion bonuses; this is the part of the market where package shape diverges most from the operator structure. The renewables developers and utilities run the power and renewables ladder, hiring renewables and grid engineers and project and development managers for the regional solar, wind, and grid pipeline, and the venture-backed and developer end pays project-completion incentives and, at the senior grade, project equity. The sovereign-aligned energy and megaproject mandates in Saudi hire project and engineering leadership at scale and add a mobility premium on the flagship schemes. The specialist energy-recruitment and contracting firms fill the volume of mid-grade engineering and project hiring on a contract basis, paying a day-rate with a mobility premium for cleared technical talent.

UAE and Saudi deltas

Both markets run active engineering and project-management hiring, and the Manager-grade bands sit close after FX. The Saudi engineering and operations manager band runs within roughly 5 to 10 percent of the UAE equivalent at the median, with the renewables and grid roles pulled upward in Saudi by the scale of the national renewables and giga-project energy pipeline. On the operator side, both markets run the same base-plus-allowances package shape; on the EPC and contracting side, both run rotational day-rates with a mobility premium. Saudization applies to the sector headcount and pulls Saudi-national engineering and project hires at a premium against the equivalent expatriate band at the same grade, most visibly at the mid-management grade where the national supply is growing fastest; senior technical and project hires are typically expatriate or returning Saudi nationals. The senior-grade sample is thin in both markets and the Pay Index flags it rather than imputing a band the source data does not support. The working week runs Monday to Friday in both Dubai and Riyadh.

Currency context

AED is pegged to USD at 3.6725. SAR is pegged at 3.75. The national and international operators pay base and allowances in local currency with global reporting in USD at senior grades. The EPC and contracting side runs rotational day-rates, often quoted in USD and paid in local or USD depending on the contract, with a mobility premium for rotational and remote-site postings. The renewables developers pay base and project incentives in local currency, with project equity at the venture-backed and developer end vesting separately. Total monthly cash on the Pay Index combines base, housing allowance, transport allowance, and a prorated annual bonus where the source data carries it; the operator package adds education allowance and end-of-service benefit, and the contractor day-rate is normalised to a monthly-equivalent for comparison. LTIP and project equity are not in the headline band.

FAQs

Why is the Energy sector narrower than the others in the Index? Energy is the newest sector in the Pay Index and the source depth is concentrated at the engineering and management core. The Manager grade carries 29 verified sources and is the most defensible reference in the sector; the senior tiers sit at the limited-data threshold and are flagged in the dashboard pending the next refresh. We publish where the data is strong and flag where it is thin rather than imputing a senior band the source data does not support. The source count on every row shows exactly where the coverage is deep.

How do you handle the operator package versus the contractor day-rate? They are different structures and the dashboard separates them. The operator package is base plus housing, transport, education, and end-of-service benefit; the contractor structure is a rotational day-rate plus a completion bonus and a mobility premium. The Pay Index normalises the day-rate to a monthly-equivalent so the two are comparable at the same grade, and the dashboard shows the package shape behind each band. Anchoring an offer means matching the structure first, then the grade.

Do you separate oil and gas from power and renewables? The dashboard separates the two tracks. Oil and gas covers the upstream and downstream engineering and operations ladder; power and renewables covers the generation, grid, and project-development ladder. The two overlap at the engineering and project-management grades, which is where the sample is deepest, and they diverge at the senior grade where the operator and developer structures pull apart. The renewables track is the faster-growing of the two, driven by the regional solar, wind, and grid pipeline.

Next step

The table above is the UAE Manager-and-above core where the data is deepest; subscribers get the same view for Riyadh, plus the two-track breakdown (Oil & Gas, Power & Renewables) and the engineering ladder inside the dashboard. Every band ships with a visible source count so the comp team sees what the number is built from, and where the sample is thin, before approving the offer.

Methodology

The bands above are built from primary sources verified to operate in Energy in UAE and Saudi. The Sources column shows total verified observations at that seniority level, aggregated across all roles. See the full Tenure Pay Index methodology for the sourcing, normalization, and refresh policy that applies to every band.

By country

How Energy pay shifts across the Gulf

By city

City-by-city breakdown

By seniority

Energy pay across the seniority ladder

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