To be a CA PE you have to pass additional exams: Seismic and Surveying (check CA Engineering Board website), on top of National PE 8 hours. After getting the CA PE License you need 3 years of practice, then you can apply for SE national exam: taking the test or comity if you passed somewhere else.
Salaries are somewhere 80-120k, depends on your experience, I don't know exactly, I am working on my SE too.
Cheers!
I have a Civil PE outside CA, I'm in the process of applying and would sit for seismic and surveying this Fall. I also have an SE, so assuming my application is accepted and I pass the exams this Fall, I understand I would just have to apply for the CA SE three years from now. The CA PE will be useful for my current position. I'm not sure I would need to go for the CA SE in my current position, but I would probably do it anyway. I am curious about what doors, if any, it would open.
Having a little insight on this, I thought that I would chime in.
Having a CA SE license is worth more when it is held outside the state of California.
I will most likely be in this situation if all goes well, could you elaborate please? PM me if you like, I would like to hear about your experience. Is an out-of-state licensed CA SE in a good position to be employed by a CA firm and transition? I wonder about that, too.
Generally, I looked through ASCE career website and the various SEAOC websites with job posts, not much salary information there. But what I did see agreed with darius' post above, somewhere between 80k-120k. I'll update with any new information.
Thanks