Title 50 › Chapter CHAPTER 44— - NATIONAL SECURITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - COORDINATION FOR NATIONAL SECURITY › § 3049a
Heads of each intelligence agency can set higher minimum pay for groups of jobs that need science, technology, engineering, or math skills or banking and financial services expertise (including work on critical financial infrastructure, capital markets, compliance, or international investments). They can raise the whole pay range for those grades. No more than 50 people or 5 percent of that agency’s full‑time jobs from the prior fiscal year (whichever is larger) can get the higher pay at any time. The special pay is treated like basic pay for similar federal pay rules. Except for the NSA rules below, a new minimum may not be more than 30 percent above the job’s normal maximum basic pay, and no rate can exceed the basic pay for Executive Schedule level IV. If an agency removes a job from the higher pay, the agency must tell each affected person and the change starts on the first day of the first pay period after the notice. Agency heads can change these rates later, and must write rules to carry out this authority similar to existing federal pay regulations. The Director of the National Security Agency has extra options for cyber jobs. The Director may set a special rate up to the Executive Schedule level II pay if the Director certifies to the Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security (with consultation) that the jobs carry out the Agency’s cyber mission. The Director may set a rate up to the Vice President’s pay for named individuals with advanced skills who perform critical cyber functions if the Director certifies those people to the Secretary of Defense. Any total pay limit will follow the federal aggregate limit rules but must count certain extra cash payments under title 10 and other law (except the Fair Labor Standards Act) and cannot exceed the Vice President’s rate. No more than 100 people may receive the Vice President–level basic pay at one time. Those NSA special rates and the VP cap cannot be used to set pay limits under certain other statutes. Within 90 days after enactment of the Damon Paul Nelson and Matthew Young Pollard Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Years 2018 and 2019, each agency head must report to the congressional intelligence committees what rates were set and how many positions are covered.
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War and National Defense — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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50 U.S.C. § 3049a
Title 50 — War and National Defense
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73