Designation Hierarchy Explained » Network Interview

NVIDIA is one of the most sought-after employers in semiconductor and AI technology — and for good reason. But navigating its internal structure can feel like deciphering GPU architecture documentation. This post breaks down how NVIDIA’s job levels actually work, from first-day intern to legendary Fellow.

Two tracks, One company

NVIDIA operates a dual-track career model familiar across Big Tech. You either grow as an Individual Contributor (IC) — deepening technical expertise — or transition onto the Management (M) track, leading teams and org units. The IC track goes from IC0 (Intern) all the way to IC9 (Fellow), while the M track runs from M1 to M7+.

Unlike many companies, NVIDIA keeps its hierarchy relatively flat and deprioritizes titles day-to-day. What matters more is the grade — it drives pay, scope, and promotion expectations.

IC Track M Track
Deepens technical mastery over time

Retains hands-on engineering work

Runs IC0 → IC9 (Fellow)

Principal and Distinguished Engineer are prestige milestones

Focuses on people and org leadership

Runs M1 → M7+ (VP and above)

IC5/IC6 roughly aligns with M2/M3

VP-level = M7, C-suite above that

Band Levels: The Full ladder level by level

Individual Contributor (IC)

BAND

ROLE

SALARY

IC0 / IC01 Intern / Co-op

Student roles, fixed-term

$30K–$75K

Student

IC1 Software / Hardware Engineer I

Entry-level; guided contributions, learning fundamentals

$75K–$120K

0–2 yrs

IC2 Software / Hardware Engineer II

Growing ownership; contributes independently to features

$100K–$150K

2–5 yrs

IC3 Senior Software Engineer

Owns moderate-to-large features; starts mentoring peers

$120K–$180K

5–8 yrs

IC4 Senior Software Engineer II

Strong independent contributor; leads design reviews

$120K–$180K

7–9 yrs

IC5 Senior Software Engineer III / Tech Lead

Cross-team scope; sets architecture direction for a domain

$120K–$180K

9–11 yrs

IC6 Principal Software Engineer

Multi-team technical authority; major architectural decisions

$160K–$230K

11–15 yrs

IC7 Distinguished Engineer

Company-wide technical influence; recognized industry expert

$200K–$320K+

15–20 yrs

IC8 Senior Distinguished Engineer

Rare; shapes NVIDIA’s multi-year technical roadmap

$300K–$500K+

20+ yrs

IC9 Fellow

The pinnacle — defines industry direction, not just company direction

Exceptional

Rare

Management (M)

BAND ROLE SALARY
M1 Program Manager

First step onto management track; individual program scope

Entry Mgr

~IC5 scope

M2 Supervisor / Program Manager II

Manages a small team; owns delivery of a workstream

~IC4 equiv

Team lead

M3 Manager

Owns a team; responsible for hiring, performance, roadmap

~IC4–5 equiv

Team scope

M4 Senior Manager

Manages multiple teams or a function; cross-team dependencies

~IC6 equiv

Multi-team

M5 Director

Owns a significant org or product area; partner-level influence

~IC7 equiv

Org-wide

M6 Senior Director

Large org or division; shapes multi-year strategy

~IC8 equiv

Division

M7+ Vice President & above

Executive leadership; VLSI, Engineering, Product VP roles

Executive

C-suite path

How NVIDIA compares to FAANG levels

NVIDIA is known to level candidates conservatively relative to companies like Google or Meta. Understanding the mapping is critical when evaluating an offer:

A Google L5 (Staff Engineer equivalent) typically maps to NVIDIA IC5 in terms of scope. But because NVIDIA levels conservatively, the incoming title may say “Senior Engineer” rather than Staff — while the compensation still reflects the IC5 band.
NVIDIA’s IC6 (Principal) is broadly equivalent to Staff at Google (L6), and IC7 (Distinguished) aligns with Senior Staff or early Principal at Google. The further up the ladder, the fuzzier the cross-company mapping gets.

What moves the needle at NVIDIA

Promotions at NVIDIA reward depth of ownership and cross-team impact more than time-in-role. A few patterns stand out from long-tenured engineers:

Accelerators

Common plateaus

Owning end-to-end delivery of a high-visibility project

Mentoring and visibly raising others’ output

Influencing architecture beyond your immediate team

Filing patents and publishing research

Staying siloed within one team’s scope

IC5 → IC6 is the steepest jump; many engineers plateau here

IC7+ requires company-wide or industry recognition

Switching tracks (IC → M) resets some expectations

Level and salary data is drawn from community sources (Levels.fyi, Blind, OpenGenus) and verified NVIDIA employee accounts. Individual compensation varies by location, negotiation, and annual RSU refresh cycles. Always negotiate — NVIDIA typically offers in the lower-to-mid band initially.

***The salary packages are only indicative and may vary as per the rise and low of the demand.***

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