Salary schedule lane changes are the most underused pay lever in teaching. This post walks through exactly what a lane change is, how to trigger one, and the timing mistakes that cost teachers thousands.
What Is a Lane Change?
A teacher salary schedule is a grid. Rows are years of experience (steps). Columns are education credits (lanes). A lane change means moving horizontally across the grid to a higher-paying column — typically by earning 15 or 30 graduate credits beyond your current credential.
Common Lane Structures
Most districts use some version of:
- BA
- BA+15
- BA+30
- MA
- MA+15
- MA+30
- MA+45 or Doctorate
Each jump typically triggers a $2,000 to $6,000 annual raise, permanent for the rest of your career.
What Credits Count
Districts generally require:
- Graduate-level (not undergraduate or CEU)
- Regionally accredited institution
- Official transcript
- Relevance to your teaching field (sometimes — check your contract)
The Pre-Approval Rule
Most districts require pre-approval of credits before you take the course. Skipping this step and hoping for the best is the single most expensive mistake teachers make. A two-sentence email to HR is all it takes.
Timing Your Lane Change
Most districts have a fall or spring deadline to submit lane change paperwork. Missing the deadline by a day means waiting another full year for the raise. Map your deadline, then back-plan when you need to finish credits.
Stacking Moves
A step increase is automatic (for each year of service). A lane change is on top of that. In a good year, both trigger at once — sometimes adding $5,000 to $8,000 total.
Browse courses that count toward your next lane change.