Updated April 2026 · SEC DEF 14A data
CFO - Alphabet
CFO at Alphabet · Internet Services
CFO - Alphabet holds the role of CFO at Alphabet. Total reported compensation: $13.3M. Named Executive Officer (NEO) compensation at U.S. public companies is disclosed through the SEC proxy statement filing — typically the CEO, CFO, and three highest-paid additional officers.
Substantial compensation packages at this level are typical of senior executives at large public companies. The mix usually skews equity-heavy, with multi-year vesting schedules tying actual realized comp to forward performance. The CEOPay executive page surfaces the per-year compensation history (where multi-year disclosure exists), the breakdown by award type, and the per-company context for the role. Cross-executive comparisons within a single company are most useful for understanding internal pay structure.
CFO - Alphabet, CFO at Alphabet, earned $13.3M in reported total compensation in fiscal year 2024. Pay was disclosed in the company's SEC DEF 14A proxy statement and is broken into salary, stock awards, option awards, non-equity incentive, pension change, and other compensation under the Summary Compensation Table required by Regulation S-K Item 402.
Total Compensation
Fiscal year 2024
Compensation Breakdown
CFO - Alphabet Cumulative Compensation: $13.3M in SEC-Disclosed Pay
CFO - Alphabet has earned $13.3M in cumulative total compensation across the 1 fiscal year of disclosure on file (2024) as CFO at Alphabet. That figure — the sum of every Summary Compensation Table entry the company has filed under SEC Regulation S-K Item 402 — is a defensible floor for an estimated net worth conversation: it is in the seven-to-eight-figure range based on disclosed pay alone; actual net worth depends materially on what fraction of vested equity CFO - Alphabet chose to hold versus sell, plus the share-price trajectory of Alphabet over the same window. CFO - Alphabet's actual net worth is not directly disclosed in SEC filings; it would require reconciling this cumulative pay with current beneficial ownership, prior open-market stock sales (reported on Form 4), exercised options, taxes paid, and personal investments outside the company.
What CFO - Alphabet's Pay Tells Us
CFO - Alphabet earns $13.3M as CFO at Alphabet — eight-figure compensation that places them comfortably above the median S&P 500 named executive officer. Stock awards and long-term incentives typically account for most of the package, with annual cash incentives reflecting near-term operational performance.
Balanced equity-and-cash package: stock and option awards account for roughly 62% of total compensation, with base salary at 15% and the remainder in annual cash incentive, pension change, and other compensation. This mix is common in mid-cap public companies and in industries with more stable revenue trajectories.
Alphabet's CEO-to-median-worker pay ratio is 235:1 — broadly typical of large U.S. enterprise companies under the SEC Item 402(u) disclosure framework. Shareholders approved the most recent say-on-pay vote with 94.6% support — within the typical S&P 500 range.
Compensation History
| Year | Salary | Bonus | Stock Awards | Options | Non-Equity | Other | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | $2.0M | - | $6.6M | $1.6M | $2.0M | $1.1M | $13.3M |
Compensation history covers a single fiscal year (2024) of disclosed total compensation. Multi-year tenure history will appear here as additional DEF 14A filings reach the SEC EDGAR system.
How These Numbers Are Reported
Every figure on this page comes from the SEC DEF 14A proxy statement that Alphabet filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ahead of its most recent annual shareholder meeting. The proxy is freely available on the SEC's EDGAR system. Inside it, the Summary Compensation Table reports salary, bonus, stock awards, option awards, non-equity incentive plan compensation, change in pension and nonqualified deferred compensation earnings, all other compensation, and total — for the chief executive officer, chief financial officer, and the three other most highly compensated executive officers (the "named executive officers" or NEOs).
Stock awards and option awards are reported at grant-date fair value under FASB ASC 718, which is an accounting estimate at the time of grant rather than realized pay. Realized pay — what the executive actually banked — appears in the separate "Option Exercises and Stock Vested" table inside the same DEF 14A. Both views matter: the grant-date number is what the board approved, the realized number is what actually flowed to the executive in a given year. Read the full methodology for inputs, weights, and how each line item is sourced.
Authoritative governance context: Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) and Glass Lewis publish the proxy-advisor frameworks most institutional shareholders use to evaluate pay alignment, and our Pay-for-Performance Grade follows the same four-factor approach.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does CFO - Alphabet earn?
CFO - Alphabet earned $13.3M in total compensation as CFO at Alphabet in fiscal year 2024, as disclosed in the company's most recent SEC DEF 14A proxy statement. CFO - Alphabet earns $13.3M as CFO at Alphabet — eight-figure compensation that places them comfortably above the median S&P 500 named executive officer. Stock awards and long-term incentives typically account for most of the package, with annual cash incentives reflecting near-term operational performance.
What is CFO - Alphabet's pay package made of?
CFO - Alphabet's reported total of $13.3M breaks into base salary of $2.0M, stock awards of $6.6M, option awards of $1.6M, plus non-equity incentive, pension change, and other compensation. Balanced equity-and-cash package: stock and option awards account for roughly 62% of total compensation, with base salary at 15% and the remainder in annual cash incentive, pension change, and other compensation. This mix is common in mid-cap public companies and in industries with more stable revenue trajectories.
What is CFO - Alphabet's net worth?
CFO - Alphabet has earned $13.3M in cumulative total compensation across the 1 fiscal year of disclosure on file (2024) as CFO at Alphabet. That figure — the sum of every Summary Compensation Table entry the company has filed under SEC Regulation S-K Item 402 — is a defensible floor for an estimated net worth conversation: it is in the seven-to-eight-figure range based on disclosed pay alone; actual net worth depends materially on what fraction of vested equity CFO - Alphabet chose to hold versus sell, plus the share-price trajectory of Alphabet over the same window. CFO - Alphabet's actual net worth is not directly disclosed in SEC filings; it would require reconciling this cumulative pay with current beneficial ownership, prior open-market stock sales (reported on Form 4), exercised options, taxes paid, and personal investments outside the company.
Where does this compensation data come from?
Every figure on this page is sourced from the SEC DEF 14A proxy statement that Alphabet filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ahead of its most recent annual shareholder meeting. The Summary Compensation Table inside the filing is the authoritative document, available on the SEC EDGAR system at https://www.sec.gov/edgar.shtml. Equity values follow FASB ASC 718 grant-date fair-value accounting; pension changes reflect the year-over-year actuarial revision required by Regulation S-K Item 402.
How has CFO - Alphabet's pay changed over time?
Compensation history covers a single fiscal year (2024) of disclosed total compensation. Multi-year tenure history will appear here as additional DEF 14A filings reach the SEC EDGAR system.
What is Alphabet's pay-for-performance picture?
Alphabet's CEO-to-median-worker pay ratio is 235:1 — broadly typical of large U.S. enterprise companies under the SEC Item 402(u) disclosure framework. Shareholders approved the most recent say-on-pay vote with 94.6% support — within the typical S&P 500 range. Alphabet earns a Pay-for-Performance Grade of B (78/100) on the four-factor framework documented on the methodology page.
Source: U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, DEF 14A proxy filings via EDGAR. Public domain.
Last updated 2026-04-06 · 1 fiscal years of compensation history on file.