Organist's Salary (Just Curious!)
  • Theo
    Posts: 50
    Recently my singer-friends and I had a chat on church musicians' salaries. I had never paid attention to these things because I am just an amateur singer. Interestingly, when I mentioned the organist at my parish has a base salary of $100K and makes another $20K-30K from weddings and funerals, my singer-friends were appalled. Their organist has a similar workload, but is paid only half of that. Then they told me many first-rate organists in the area make even less, but the workload is about the same or heavier.

    I know salaries can vary a great deal, but it seems surprising when these churches are no more than 2 miles away from one another and when the organists are equally qualified. And I also wonder if churches pay any attention to the NPM or AGO salary guidelines.
  • matthewjmatthewj
    Posts: 2,700
    There really is no rhyme or reason to an organist or DM's salary.

    It depends on many factors:
    1) Pastor
    2) Finance Council
    3) Musician's skills (musical)
    4) Musician's skills (pastoral)
    5) The art of negotiation
    6) Who you know
    7) Area of town (and the wealthiest areas don't always pay the most - though they do sometimes)
    8) Diocese Guidelines (if they exist)
    9) Amount of duties/services/choirs/hours
    10) The color tie you wear to the audition/interview

    If you took 20 random full time church musicians and put them in a room and had them all discuss their salary and work-arrangements in grave and honest detail you would see some of the weirdest things in the world. Some of the most talented folks would be making 30-45k and some middle-range folks would be making 80-100k. Nobody can really make sense of these things... it's just how it works.
  • canadashcanadash
    Posts: 1,501
    I think it's fantastic that your organist can make that much. Wow. More power to him! Too bad not every parish/pastor/committee are as or are as able to be so generous.
  • Theo
    Posts: 50
    @canadash: Some parish council members don't want the parish to be so generous, especially when other staff (who are older) voluntarily cut back on their work hours and salaries about two years ago. I suppose it is hard to implement a cut in salary if it has been that high for almost a decade.
  • BruceL
    Posts: 1,072
    It depends a great deal on location, too. My salary would need to be 30-40% higher in NYC to be fair.
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  • You are sure the "$100k" amount is totally accurate and not hyperbole in the least? If so, is this a major cathedral or a church in a place like NYC?
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  • That does seem a bit off for a Catholic Church. I know the presbyterian church over where I am at, used to pay around 80-100k, but it was a major job, televised, and responsibilites where very demanding. Now with the death of the founding pastor, the church voted in a crazy new pastor that wants contemporary music, and the pipe organ sits unused many Sundays. They used to send out messages to the AGO members asking if anyone would come and volunteer so I have been told. lol
  • In my area, DOM's and organists are all part-time and make very little. It's not unusual for an organist to play a couple of masses at one church and then go across town for the later masses. Salary is usually commensurate on experience, but I would venture to say is considerably lower than the national average.
  • It's been my experience that pastors (who are invariably in charge of setting the wage for lay employees) do not adhere to the NPM or AGO salary schedules. At least I've never been asked if I am a member of either organization. It is my understanding that they are not obliged to adhere to them either.
  • Theo
    Posts: 50
    You are sure the "$100k" amount is totally accurate and not hyperbole in the least? If so, is this a major cathedral or a church in a place like NYC?


    Yes, it's accurate. And like I said, that's only the base salary. Weddings and funerals add another $20K, if not more. This is in a major city, but not at a cathedral or basilica. The workload is three weekend Masses and one adult choir, plus 2-3 non-liturgical events each year.
  • chonakchonak
    Posts: 9,216
    It is my understanding that they [pastors] are not obliged to adhere to them [AGO and NPM pay schedules] either.

    Perhaps the idea is that AGO members would influence pay levels by refusing to take jobs below the minimum. But organ jobs are a buyers' market.
  • CHGiffenCHGiffen
    Posts: 5,193
    But organ jobs are a buyers' market.

    How regrettably true.
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  • Theo
    Posts: 50
    Perhaps the idea is that AGO members would influence pay levels by refusing to take jobs below the minimum.


    This doesn't sound realistic. I see a lot of world-class concert organists taking up jobs that do not match their musical abilities. There are too many qualified organists and not enough good positions. As supply is much greater than demand, I think many pastors can get away with low pay. I have also heard some pastors asking for full-time workload but offering only a half-time salary without benefits.
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  • @Theo: That is unfortunately becoming the norm.
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  • In my town here in Germany all organists except one work for a honorary of about 10-15€ (13-20$) per Mass. Choir directors have separate contracts whose conditions are unknown to me. We usually play only on weekends since except in the church my organ teachers plays at daily Masses are not accompanied by organ due to money constraints. But we are all amateurs, there is almost no one who has studied church music.
  • Europe is very interesting - when I was in Vienna, the organist at St. Stephens made 19 Euros per Mass. However, in Europe that is very often not the whole story. In many cases there is subsidized housing near the church, etc. Even with those arrangements, though, most major church musicians seem to hold other positions (e.g. university teaching) to make a living. It is as if the cathedral posting is primarily honorary, and then it's up to the organist to monetize that prestige through teaching appointments, concertizing, etc.

    The interesting thing is that there are loads of fantastic musicians working in Europe, with comprehensive training in harmony, counterpoint, and especially improvisation - and making a pittance. It always surprises me how few of these musicians come to the states. Many mid-level musicians over there would be a shoo-in for the top US positions.
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  • BruceL
    Posts: 1,072
    I have been told that (in Germanic countries) the ideal gig is to get a large parish/cathedral where you play daily Masses as well weekend and choir Masses. There is usually housing included, too. It seems these posts are the most comparable to the *typical* US job paying $40-70k for full-time work.
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  • ryandryand
    Posts: 1,640
    I have also heard some pastors asking for full-time workload but offering only a half-time salary without benefits.


    To be fair, those pastors are often quite generous...

    ...with their passive-aggressive "do it for the Lord" guilt trips.


    Some of us have responsibilities at home, which are part of a godly life, and they'd be better served if we were bagging groceries than putting some decades of expensive training to use at St. Agnes the Cheapskate. It's dumbfounding how you can look some pastors in the eye and ask, "So I'm not going to have a way to pay for my wife to see the doctor?" and they're confused as to what the problem might be.

    I hear that Starbucks offers benefits to part-time employees...
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,979
    Priests are sometimes completely out of touch with financial reality. Their housing, food, medical, and often car allowance are paid by the diocese. They receive gifts, of course, but most of their salary is fun money. Many of them have never worked at anything else, and they have no idea what anything costs. I have most liked some of the older priests with late vocations who actually spent some time in the business world.
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  • Liam
    Posts: 5,092
    Pastors can be prone to a lack of empathy flowing from what is, when you scrape off the barnacles of rationalizations, self-pity.
  • In Australia, it is literally impossible to make a living purely as an organist unless you (a) work at a cathedral, (b) work for one of a handful of independent Protestant parishes which have a strong line in "society weddings". Cathedral vacancies seldom occur less than a decade apart, given Australia's small population - only 22 million - and given the tendency of said population to congregate in a few coastal cities. (Unless you count Canberra, there has never been an equivalent in Australia of major inland centers such as Chicago or St. Louis.)

    That's the bad news; the good news is that in Australia one can expect, if one is even halfway competent as an organist, to make at least $A80 (around U.S. $75 at the moment) per service. With fashionable Anglican ( = Episcopalian) or Uniting (sort of = Congregationalist) churches, an organist can pretty much name his own fee.

    Many Australian organists teach (usually piano) for a living. Quite a few - all too many in fact - merely treat organ-playing as a hobby and, through some pin-headed notion of the devout life, choose to get paid little or nothing. They do themselves more damage than even the most malignant pastor could hope to inflict on them.
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  • I know a major Catholic Church that pays their DM $138,000
  • matthewjmatthewj
    Posts: 2,700
    There are many 100k + jobs out there. They're not all ideal situations though and the stress might not be worth it compared to a 60-90k ideal position. Though sometimes I look at folks who work "normal" jobs - or even hourly retail jobs - and think they probably have more stress than us but have heartier dispositions as non-musicians.
  • irishtenoririshtenor
    Posts: 1,325
    Could you elaborate, MJM? What do you mean by, "not all ideal?" The position requires 5 weekend Masses, 3 choirs, and a concert series? Something else? I realize a lot of this is speculative for most of us
  • matthewjmatthewj
    Posts: 2,700
    Not workload... other things.
  • melofluentmelofluent
    Posts: 4,160
    I hear that Starbucks offers benefits to part-time employees...

    No doubt due in no small part that they laid off thousands of mid level managers and district managers after the 08 recession. My organist being one of them.
  • I doubt the truth of these supposed $100,000 jobs at Catholic churches - even Trinity Wall Street (Episcopal) only offered $125,000 a year - and their choice from England had to back out because he and his family would not be able to live on that in the NYC area.

    It's depressing for organists to hear about this kind of salary when they are working for peanuts. For that reason, we need proof before this goes any further. A church with a budget that size will often have a budget available. Once we see one, just one of those, the topic can continue but until then I suggest speculation about this might cease.
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  • irishtenoririshtenor
    Posts: 1,325
    I'm with CC on this -- where are these "many 100k + jobs?" I know of a few people who make $80ish (some also get housing), and someone who is a composer (published and recorded by one of the big 3), but don't know anyone who makes that much in a Catholic position.

    If you don't want your handle associated with sharing this information, you can always make a "sock puppet."

    I've got a family to support and I'd love a 100k+ job, but I've never seen one 'in the wild.' I would guess that major cathedrals, basilicas, and other extremely wealthy parishes might be able to pull this off, but I doubt there are enough out there to qualify as "many."

    [Contrary to irishtenor's well-meaning suggestion, sockpuppets (multiple accounts used secretly as aliases by one user) are not wanted on the forum. There's been too much mischief with them, and I will delete any I find. --admin]
  • matthewjmatthewj
    Posts: 2,700
    Look to large, above-average-income, suburban parishes with large music programs that aren't quite in-line with the CMAA mindset. I'd guess there are 2-3 or more outside of each metropolitan area. I've held such a position and have been offered similar positions before in other states. Some folks can even make significant progress toward orthodoxy in music at these locales (though sometimes only at one or two Masses), but there's usually a line you can't cross at some point and politics/meetings/etc will lead you to think that 65-80k at another place might be a much better fit. I've noticed that one of the places I was offered the job at (and declined) eventually put out new ads for 2 full time positions around 50-60k and one part time position, which added together were the exact salary they offered me.
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  • I've never seen any job for even half of what has been discussed here, and of course no benefits.
    Thanked by 1ryand
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,979
    Same here. There is one large, I mean really large, Presbyterian church in the area that is near the 80K figure, or was 10 years ago. I haven't kept up with it since then. But Catholic churches pay well? What's that about pigs flying? LOL.
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,482
    1. Unless you are lucky to be right there next to one, you have to be willing to move anywhere before "many" is meaningful.

    2. Do you see very many $100k/yr software development jobs on Craigslist or Monster? The best jobs are not advertised.
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  • ghmus7
    Posts: 1,483
    I have never seen a Catholic position above 60k my entire career. I can't believe there numbers being sported about. I would really like to see where these churches are.
  • CharlesW wrote above: " I have most liked some of the older priests with late vocations who actually spent some time in the business world."

    As a general rule, most of the late-vocation priests I've known have been either very bad or very good. In the former category are those who are late-vocation priests for no other discernible reason than that their symptoms of narcissistic personality disorder have unfitted them for continuing in any of their previous, usually flaky, jobs. In the latter, and happily larger, category are those who have experienced demanding employment (i.e. the sort of employment from which incompetents can be, and are, dismissed) and, while not regretting any of it, decided in middle age that the priesthood was what they really sought all along.

    Having said that, I should also say that the best priest I've met and the worst priest I've met were both extremely early vocations.

    Matthewj refers to "above-average-income, suburban parishes". Perhaps in these parishes it's the presence of existing music programs that makes the difference; or perhaps it's an American-versus-Australian thing. The absolute nadir of Catholic music-making that I've ever experienced in Australia has usually been in suburban parishes which are rich. These parishes often have a plethora of frightful burp-boxes - the sorts of toys for which Radio Shack would never dare charge you more than $25 - masquerading as "organs". Yet in some areas of Sydney which are outright, well, slummy, I've seen and heard (indeed played on) organs which are truly handsome instruments by any criterion.
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  • BruceL
    Posts: 1,072
    As a cathedral musician, I think I can state two truths:

    1) There are quite a few Catholic jobs over $60k. Would that all cathedral ones were!
    2) Many (most?) of these jobs are NOT cathedral positions. For instance, in our (small) diocese, there are at least three parishes that have budgets higher (in at least one case, double) our cathedral (our budget is around $750k a year). The flip side is that the suburban parishes will often try to "bridge the gap" musically...the usually means some sort of blended worship. So, you're getting your money...but maybe not your artistic satisfaction/spiritual fulfillment/sense of purpose.

    Another comment on N's/TCC's comment above about Trinity Wall Street. Yes, the salary isn't huge, but I'm sure 1) housing is provided; 2) there is a significant slush fund (i.e., you go to whatever conventions, etc., you want every year...doesn't count against vacation); 3) the music budget is huge (TWS spent $2.5 MILLION last year on music). So, real pay isn't always the whole story.

    Finally, as in all fields, benefits are the equalizer. My advice is to check the benefits situation in a job assiduously. Our diocesan family plan is, frankly, poor: I pay something like 60% of the premium of my health care plan ($500 ded. per person) and copays are still $30 or more. This is compared to my last job in a major archdiocese, where it was 75% on the parish, 25% on me. I wish I had checked that out better (for negotiating purposes), although I would have taken the job anyway.
  • melofluentmelofluent
    Posts: 4,160
    My pastor asked me to consider coming onto the then one parish campus in a full time capacity, thereby leaving my public school gig and its salaries, benefits, guarantees, etc. That latter salary plus PT at parish helped get our kids through schools, and they were by then on their own. I simply said you have to be within 5K of my base gross $ from the school district + comp. health. He didn't blink, we took the net hit, and it's been at the same for 8+ years. Job's changed a ton, though. BIGGER.
  • Theo
    Posts: 50
    I know a major Catholic Church that pays their DM $138,000


    Is that in a major city? Is the parish run by diocesan priests or religious priests? Is that the base salary or the total compensation including weddings, funerals, and benefits?

    I doubt the truth of these supposed $100,000 jobs at Catholic churches


    Honestly I wasn't joking or exaggerating about the $100K base salary. The total compensation exceeds that, of course, with the above average fees for weddings and funerals, plus excellent benefits from the archdiocese.

    I should not reveal the exact location of my parish. All I can say is that it is in Manhattan, NYC. It is not the cathedral, nor is it a Jesuit parish in case if anyone is thinking of the wealthy St. Ignatius parish.
  • GavinGavin
    Posts: 2,799
    It's in NYC? How could you expect anyone to work there for any less??
  • Yeah, that makes a lot more sense.

    These numbers don't mean much for what it costs to live there. $100,000 base for NYC is probably similar to a more reasonable base like $55,000 or $60,000 somewhere else.

    I'm not sure if one could work for less if they were to live in the suburbs or the NJ side and take the subway in; having never lived there, I don't know how feasible that would be on a regular basis either.
  • Another comment on N's/TCC's comment above about Trinity Wall Street. Yes, the salary isn't huge, but I'm sure 1) housing is provided; 2) there is a significant slush fund (i.e., you go to whatever conventions, etc., you want every year...doesn't count against vacation); 3) the music budget is huge (TWS spent $2.5 MILLION last year on music). So, real pay isn't always the whole story


    As you can see from the job posting which was posted here on this list, there was no housing included in the $125,000. Which is why, as I originally posted, the gentleman had to turn it down. I try to be careful to make sure that I have the details right in my head before posting....most of the time.

    We offer a competitive salary along with a comprehensive benefits package. For consideration, please send your resume and salary history with your salary requirements to:
    Trinity Wall Street
    Human Resources Department
    74 Trinity Place, Room 503
    NY, NY 10006-2088



    I interviewed for California full-time job in which they offered 60k...which sounded great until I researched and found figures that showed that in the area 80k was considered what it cost to live just above the poverty level.
  • Theo
    Posts: 50
    These numbers don't mean much for what it costs to live there. $100,000 base for NYC is probably similar to a more reasonable base like $55,000 or $60,000 somewhere else.


    True. But my singer-friends tell me that most parishes pay their organists something like $40000-60000 here in Manhattan. They make it sound like my parish is spending way too much on the organist's salary.
  • matthewjmatthewj
    Posts: 2,700
    People should mind their own business, work toward finding a salary and position that they love, and not worry about anyone else.
  • Theo,

    If you had said this was NYC....or Hong Kong...or other very expansive place to live...in the beginning, it would have eliminated a lot of idle speculation.

    Seriously, there is NO Catholic church anywhere that is paying too much for their organist. If the organist at your parish is making $100,000 she or he is earning it.

    Being an organist at a parish in NYC can be just playing on Sunday mornings - if so, a person could take the bus or tube in from NJ and work cheap. However, many Catholic churches in NYC have active funeral Mass schedules which, combined with a couple of choir rehearsals and cantors to train, immediately means full time with little time for commuting from the burbs.

    I was lucky to live in Manhattan and commute to work in Brooklyn which was lovely, I can't imagine fighting rush hour on the subway to get to funerals - though I did it as I worked for a singer's agency and would cover churches with 2 or 3 funerals in the Bronx and they'd send a sub to my job....took a lot of coordination when we were doing these 2 or three at two different churches.

    Any priest who would pay $100,000 to have a fine musician in place in NYC doesn't need people gossiping and speculating about something that is between the pastor and the organist. Priests have been known to supplement parish budgets with their own personal money.

    How much did Fred Swann make at the Crystal Cathedral, Bish at the church in Florida and others. Often there is a golden fairy in the church who makes generous contributions to make it possible for stellar artists to be in place. None of our business.
  • Liam
    Posts: 5,092
    Sidebar re Trinity Wall Street that is relevant for setting context. The expenses of their music program have been the subject of tension in that community. All that said, few Catholic churches have the property holdings in lower Manhattan that prove over US$35 million in annual income.... Trinity Wall Street is relic from the *medieval* pattern of great church wealth from land-based income.
  • Theo
    Posts: 50
    Seriously, there is NO Catholic church anywhere that is paying too much for their organist. If the organist at your parish is making $100,000 she or he is earning it.


    Catholic Choirbook,

    I agree with what you said. A base salary of $100K + bonus + benefits is nothing unusual in other career fields. However, based on the information my singer-friends shared and the current discussion, it seems like this salary level IS atypical among Catholic parishes. It seems to me that most Catholic parishes in NYC don't take the high cost of living into account when they hire their organists. Perhaps organists should collectively bargain for a better salary from the Catholic Church so they can afford their rent and don't go hungry.

    However, many Catholic churches in NYC have active funeral Mass schedules which, combined with a couple of choir rehearsals and cantors to train, immediately means full time with little time for commuting from the burbs.


    My organist lives in Western NJ and commutes to work 4 to 5 times a week. Also, many organists are part-time on paper but working a full-time workload. Again, I say that organists should bargain for a better salary.

    Often there is a golden fairy in the church who makes generous contributions to make it possible for stellar artists to be in place.


    Right! Some churches have huge endowments for music, so hiring stellar artists and a large professional choir is financially feasible. But most churches don't have an endowment for music, including those in NYC.
  • It seems to me that this thread can't go anywhere given the fact that there are too many geographic locations represented and the cost of living differs from each area. The original post was in comparing salaries, but it's apples and oranges depending on where you live. In my area, there is no such thing as a full time music director. Every church, of most denominations hire part-time musicians.
  • Theo
    Posts: 50
    Please read the original post again. I mentioned that there is a huge range of salary among organists working more or less the same workload and at parishes in the same neighborhood. I wasn't comparing salaries from different geographical areas.
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,979
    Send us money, lots of money. We musicians deserve it, and God wants us to have it.
  • melofluentmelofluent
    Posts: 4,160
    I have to come down with MatthewJM and MT56-this thread can never be anything but diffuse.
  • Melo, it already is.