City · Texas
Temple — Public Employee Salaries
State agencies, public-university campuses, and statewide programs employing 3 Texans in Temple. Aggregate annual payroll: $268,860. Average base pay: $89,620. Median: $85,417. The largest reported salary in this city is $106,170.
Who works for the State of Texas in Temple
The public-sector workforce attributed to Temple reflects a mix of agency headquarters, university campuses, and field operations. The largest employer in our dataset for this city is SOIL AND WATER CONSERVATION BOARD, followed by other state agencies and authorities listed below. Together they account for 3 of the 6,000 employee records in OpenPayrolls Texas, with an aggregate annualized payroll of $268,860.
Top job titles in Temple include Network Specialist Iv, Program Specialist Vii, Human Resources Specialist Iv. These are the most frequently appearing titles among reported employees, not necessarily the highest paid — for the highest-paid roles, see the table below.
Salary ranges in Temple span $77,273 at the entry-level reporting threshold to $106,170 at the top, with the median holding at $85,417. As elsewhere in Texas state government, the highest individual salaries are concentrated in academic medical-center leadership, university executive roles, athletic-program coaching, and senior judicial positions. Mid-range salaries tend to cluster around professional and technical classifications — engineers, accountants, attorneys, IT staff, and senior caseworkers. Entry-level state pay, where it appears in Temple, falls in the bands typical of public-sector administrative and direct-care roles.
Top earners in Temple
| Name | Title | Agency | Annual pay |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adrian Perez | Program Specialist Vii | SOIL AND WATER CONSERVATION BOARD | $106,170 |
| Clay Wright | Network Specialist Iv | SOIL AND WATER CONSERVATION BOARD | $85,417 |
| Tory Matthys | Human Resources Specialist Iv | SOIL AND WATER CONSERVATION BOARD | $77,273 |
Major employers in Temple
Reading these numbers in context
Public-sector salary data is most useful when read in context. A state classification in Temple may differ in cost-of-living impact from the same classification in another metro — Texas does not publish formal locality pay schedules across its general state workforce, so headline figures are not adjusted for housing, childcare, or commuting costs. For comparable benchmarking, see our city-by-city breakdown on all Texas cities or the agency-by-agency comparison on the agencies index.
If you are researching a specific public role — for hiring, journalism, or policy work — the job-titles index aggregates every classification across the state so you can compare what the same title pays in Temple versus other Texas cities. For a deeper editorial primer on how Texas reports compensation, see our methodology and the salary guides.