Skip to main content
CEOPayWatch

Is the Intuit CEO Overpaid?

On pay-for-performance, Intuit scores C (63/100) on the CEOPay rubric: Sasan Goodarzi earned $15.7M in 2025 while the company posted a 21.5% three-year total shareholder return — meaning pay alignment is mixed. "Overpaid" is ultimately a judgment, but the grade puts the pay package next to the results it was meant to reward.

This page answers a common executive-compensation question: Is the Intuit CEO Overpaid?. The answer draws on SEC DEF 14A proxy statements, the public disclosure mechanism for U.S. public-company executive pay. Every public company must file an annual proxy statement disclosing CEO and named-executive-officer compensation in detail. Why this matters for shareholders: executive compensation is the single most-disclosed governance metric at U.S. public companies, and the Dodd-Frank-mandated say-on-pay vote gives shareholders an explicit channel to express approval or dissent. Reading pay data well — including pay-versus-performance, peer-group selection, and time-vesting structures — is a basic part of stock-by-stock fundamental analysis.

The detailed answer below uses the actual proxy-statement filings, explains how to read them, and translates the executive-compensation accounting into the shareholder-relevant interpretation.

Intuit Pay-for-Performance Scorecard

Pay-for-Performance grade
C (63/100)
3-yr shareholder return
21.5%
3-yr revenue growth
14.5%
Say-on-pay approval
93.5%
CEO total comp
$15.7M
CEO-to-worker ratio
98:1

Source: Intuit SEC DEF 14A proxy statement. Pay-for-Performance grade is CEOPay's proprietary score (TSR alignment 40%, revenue-vs-pay growth 30%, say-on-pay 20%, pay ratio vs peers 10%).

The CEOPay Pay-for-Performance Score grades Intuit a C (63/100). It weighs four factors pulled from the company's SEC filings: three-year total shareholder return alignment (72/100), revenue growth versus compensation growth (17/100), say-on-pay vote support (97/100), and CEO-to-worker pay ratio versus peers (100/100). Sasan Goodarzi's $15,744,000 package is the number those factors judge.

Over the trailing three years, Intuit delivered 21.5% total shareholder return on 14.5% revenue growth, and 93.5% of shareholders approved the pay plan in the most recent say-on-pay vote. That mix is roughly average; the pay neither clearly led nor clearly lagged the results.

There is no single threshold for "overpaid." The package only pays out in full if performance and vesting conditions are met, and equity dominates it: $7,872,000 of Sasan Goodarzi's 2025 pay came from stock awards versus $1,574,400 in base salary. Reasonable shareholders weigh the grade, the say-on-pay vote, and the peer-group context together rather than the headline number alone.

Pay & Performance Data

ComponentAmount
Total Compensation$15,744,000
Base Salary$1,574,400
Stock Awards$7,872,000
Option Awards$1,889,280
Non-Equity Incentive$2,361,600
CEO-to-Worker Pay Ratio98:1
Pay-Performance GradeC

Frequently Asked Questions

On pay-for-performance, Intuit scores C (63/100) on the CEOPay rubric: Sasan Goodarzi earned $15.7M in 2025 while the company posted a 21.5% three-year total shareholder return — meaning pay alignment is mixed. "Overpaid" is ultimately a judgment, but the grade puts the pay package next to the results it was meant to reward.

Our Pay-for-Performance Score rates Intuit as C (63/100), based on three-year total shareholder return of 21.5%, revenue growth of 14.5%, and shareholder say-on-pay vote approval.

Sasan Goodarzi, CEO of Intuit, earned $15.7M in total compensation in 2025, including $7.9M in stock awards and $1,574,400 in base salary.

Intuit's CEO-to-worker pay ratio is 98:1. CEO Sasan Goodarzi earns approximately 98 times the median worker's pay of $160,000, as disclosed in the company's SEC DEF 14A proxy statement.

Sasan Goodarzi is the chief executive officer of Intuit (INTU).

On pay-for-performance, Intuit scores C (63/100) on the CEOPay rubric: Sasan Goodarzi earned $15.7M in 2025 while the company posted a 21.5% three-year total shareholder return — meaning pay alignment is mixed. "Overpaid" is ultimately a judgment, but the grade puts the pay package next to the results it was meant to reward.

Source: SEC EDGAR DEF 14A proxy statements, 2026.