Why Top Performers Quit When New Hires Get Paid More
When a new hire earns more for the same role, top performers don't just notice — they recalculate. They start asking whether their pay has ever truly reflected their value.
And too often, the answer pushes them out the door.
A 2024 Harvard Business Review analysis of more than 4 million employee records found that roughly one in four resigning employees are high performers under normal conditions. But that number jumps to more than one in three after a higher-paid new hire joins the team. The research, spanning nearly 100 companies across the U.S., Canada and Europe between 2018 and 2023, also revealed that top performers resign more than twice as fast when companies delay adjusting existing employees' pay.
Payscale's 2026 Compensation Best Practices Report reinforces the trend: 33% of employers say pay compression between newer and longer-tenured employees is driving workers to perceive their compensation as unfair.
Pay disparity isn't just a money problem. It's a perception problem — one shaped by how quickly the company responds and how much trust erodes when adjustments come too slowly. Companies that wait for annual reviews to close pay gaps don't just risk losing top performers. They risk losing the institutional knowledge those performers carry and the teams they lead.
Top Performers Notice Pay Gaps First
Top performers tend to be the first to spot misalignment between pay and contribution. They track the market, talk to recruiters and benchmark themselves against peers. In recent years, that comparison has gotten easier as salary transparency laws expand and compensation data becomes more accessible.
The HBR study found something striking: even when existing employees couldn't see a new hire's exact salary, the arrival of that colleague alone prompted them to reassess whether their own pay was fair. A higher-paid new hire doesn't always create the suspicion — it often just confirms one that was already there.
The "Sucker Effect" Hits Hardest
Psychologists call it the "sucker effect" — the workplace dynamic where employees start to believe they're being taken advantage of, contributing more than their fair share without comparable reward. The HBR researchers found this reaction intensifies sharply for top performers when they learn a new hire is earning more for similar work.
The logic is simple. If a top performer has delivered above expectations for years and a new hire walks in at a higher salary, it rewires how that employee thinks about loyalty, performance and reward. Consistent contribution suddenly looks less valuable than external leverage.
Top performers take pride in what they deliver. They expect compensation to match. When it doesn't, they don't just feel underpaid — they feel undervalued.
Speed Matters More Than the Gap Itself
How quickly a company responds to a pay gap can matter more than the size of the gap.
HBR's research shows that every month a company waits to adjust existing employees' pay shortens how long those employees stay. But top performers aren't always demanding an immediate raise. What they're really watching for is whether the company sees the disparity and acts on it. A quick adjustment signals that leadership is paying attention. A delay signals that the inequity isn't a priority.
Annual review cycles, lengthy performance management processes and rigid compensation structures all slow the response. The HBR researchers note that without more agile tools, even well-intentioned managers struggle to move fast enough to retain the people who matter most.
Trust Erodes — And It's Expensive to Rebuild
Pay decisions aren't just transactional. They send a message about what the company values.
When employers hire new talent at premium salaries while existing employees wait for raises, top performers read the pattern clearly: loyalty is worth less than outside leverage. The HBR researchers found that sustained pay disparities significantly erode trust in leadership. Employees who feel treated unfairly begin questioning other company decisions. Morale drops. Commitment weakens. Outside opportunities start to look better.
For top performers, that trust erosion is especially damaging. These are often the employees most invested in the company's mission, most willing to take on stretch assignments and most likely to advocate for the business internally. When trust breaks, that engagement doesn't just fade — it vanishes.
One Departure Triggers a Chain Reaction
The loss of a top performer rarely stays isolated. HBR's research describes downstream effects that compound the initial damage. When employees watch high-performing colleagues become demotivated or leave, they start questioning their own future at the company.
Higher-paid new hires make that comparison even harder to ignore. Their presence is a reminder that switching jobs is always an option — and that prompts a reassessment of satisfaction across the board.
The costs add up fast. Replacing one top performer is expensive. But when that loss sparks broader disengagement or additional resignations, companies face higher turnover costs, lost institutional knowledge and team disruption that can take years to repair. Healthcare company Providence found that targeted pay increases could save the organization $6 million in turnover costs — a clear reminder that retention has measurable financial value.
Managers Are Closest to the Problem — But Often Lack the Tools
Managers are usually closest to the employees most at risk of leaving, yet they frequently lack the information or authority to act. They can see when a top performer is frustrated, disengaged or taking recruiter calls — but they may not know how that employee's pay compares to new hires in similar roles.
That puts managers in an impossible position. They're expected to retain top talent but often have limited visibility into compensation decisions and little influence over how quickly pay adjustments happen. By the time a top performer raises the issue directly, they may already be halfway out the door.
Companies can reduce that risk by giving managers clearer guidance on pay ranges, internal equity and escalation processes. When managers understand where disparities exist and how to address them quickly, they're far better equipped to retain top performers before frustration turns into a resignation letter.
How to Keep Top Performers From Walking Away
Regular pay audits, more agile compensation systems, and faster responses when inequities surface can help companies hold on to their best people before frustration turns into resignation.
That urgency is only growing. Pay transparency laws are expanding, salary benchmarking tools are becoming more sophisticated and employees are more aware of internal inequities than ever before. Companies that wait for annual reviews to address pay disparities are betting they can outlast the attention span of their top performers. They usually lose that bet.
Ultimately, top performers aren't quitting because they dislike their jobs or think their pay is too low. They're quitting because the gap between what they contribute and what they receive has become too visible to ignore.
As the HBR researchers put it: "Our research shows that to avoid attrition, and in particular to avoid losing top performers, pay adjustments have to happen fast."
