# I have two competing offers - how do I leverage that?

> Counteroffer · Answers · offer
> Source: https://trycounteroffer.com/answers/competing-offers-leverage


**Short answer:** Use competing offers factually, not as ultimatums. Mention the competing offer's specific terms (company, role, comp) to each recruiter so they can evaluate fairly. Don't claim you have offers you don't actually have; recruiters often verify. Use the competing offer to ask for specific adjustments, not for vague 'more.' Both companies typically improve their offers when they know you have alternatives, but only by amounts they consider justified.

## The honest approach

The simplest way to leverage competing offers is to be transparent:

> "Thank you for the offer. I also have an offer from [Other Company] at [their offer terms]. I prefer [your company] for [specific reasons], but the math currently favors them at [specific gap]. Could we discuss whether there's room to close the gap?"

This works because:

- It's factual and verifiable
- It gives the recruiter specific terms to evaluate
- It signals you've thought about it, not just shopping for higher numbers
- It includes a non-monetary preference (you prefer their company for reasons)
- It asks for a specific outcome (close the gap) rather than vague "more"

Most recruiters respond positively to this framing. They know competing offers are normal; they respect candidates who handle them professionally.

## What to share, what not to share

**Share:**

- The competing company name (recruiters can verify if relevant)
- The specific total comp components (base, equity, sign-on, bonus target)
- The role and level being offered
- Your honest assessment of which you prefer and why

**Don't share:**

- The competing recruiter's name or contact information
- Internal company information from the competing company
- Verbal commitments that aren't in writing
- Made-up offers or inflated terms

The credibility of your competing offer depends on it being real and consistent across conversations. Recruiters at major companies talk to each other and can verify.

## Using competing offers to specific items

The most effective use of competing offers is to anchor specific asks:

**On equity:**
> "Their offer includes [X] equity. Yours is at [Y]. Could we adjust to match or come closer?"

**On base salary:**
> "Their base is [X] vs your [Y]. The market data also supports [X]. Could we match?"

**On sign-on bonus:**
> "Their sign-on of [X] would help bridge my unvested equity from [prior employer]. Could you match?"

**On level placement:**
> "They're placing me at [Senior Engineer] vs your offer of [Engineer]. Could you confirm whether the level evaluation can be revisited?"

**On start date:**
> "Their start date is more flexible. Could you accommodate a 3-week delay to align with my prior employer separation?"

Specific asks get specific responses. Vague "they're offering more" gets vague "we'll see what we can do."

## When you don't actually have a competing offer

If you don't have a competing offer, don't claim one. Recruiters at major companies often verify, and even at smaller companies, getting caught fabricating destroys negotiating credibility for the entire process.

Alternative anchors when you don't have competing offers:

- **Market data** from Levels.fyi, Pave, Glassdoor
- **Peer data** from your network (use carefully, not naming individuals)
- **Industry benchmarks** for the role and stage
- **Your prior compensation** at the previous employer
- **Your minimum acceptable** terms based on your situation

These are all legitimate anchors. None require fabrication.

## Multiple competing offers

If you genuinely have multiple competing offers, the approach gets nuanced:

**Be careful about playing companies against each other.** Recruiters know when they're being shopped and may withdraw. The honest "I have multiple offers, here are the trade-offs" approach is more effective than aggressive multi-company bidding.

**Identify your real preference.** Even if multiple offers exist, decide which company is your actual preference. Negotiate hardest with that company, using others as validation.

**Communicate clearly with each.** If you have a Google offer and an Amazon offer, mention both to each. Don't pretend the other doesn't exist.

**Decline gracefully.** When you make a final decision, decline the other offers professionally. The recruiters you decline are part of your network for future opportunities.

## Verification dynamics

For senior roles especially, competing offer claims may be verified:

- Sometimes by checking with someone at the other company
- Sometimes by asking for the offer letter (most recruiters won't insist, but some do)
- Sometimes by indirect signals (timing, your specific knowledge of their process)

If you're going to claim a competing offer, be prepared for the company to ask for evidence. Have the offer letter ready (with redactions if needed). Have your timeline straight. Don't be vague about specifics.

## When the competing offer changes your decision

If the negotiation results in one offer materially improving, decide which you actually prefer based on:

- Total comp (including realistic equity valuations)
- Role fit and growth potential
- Team and management quality
- Company trajectory and stability
- Personal factors (commute, flexibility, etc.)

Don't simply take the highest number. Equity value depends on company outcomes. Total package value depends on retention through vesting. Choose what fits your goals, not just the biggest opening offer.

## What to do next

If you want a delivered analysis of your competing offers including comparative benchmarking and negotiation recommendations, we deliver one in 24 hours for $199. See [Offer Review](https://trycounteroffer.com/offer).

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## Related answers
- [How do I negotiate a job offer?](https://trycounteroffer.com/answers/how-to-negotiate-a-job-offer)
- [How do I counter a job offer professionally?](https://trycounteroffer.com/answers/how-to-counter-job-offer)
- [What's negotiable in a job offer?](https://trycounteroffer.com/answers/whats-negotiable-in-job-offer)

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Last updated: Sun May 31 2026 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)

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