Originally posted by TheFaQQer
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Changing from employment into contracting work
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I reckon if you're working less than 30 weeks a year, that might be sensible. Otherwise no way. :-)Originally posted by northernladuk View PostTotally this!!
A pretty fully-utilised year, 575 would bring in £130K gross. Using a few standard tricks, that could equate to £100K net. You'd need a decent bonus/health/etc package to bring £100K basic up to that level, surely.
Unless you used EBTs, in which case it might end up equating to £30K p.a...Comment
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Quite a few unrealistic assumptions in there and a load that aren't mentioned but if that's the view you want to take of it then feel free.Originally posted by parallelmonogamist View PostI reckon if you're working less than 30 weeks a year, that might be sensible. Otherwise no way. :-)
A pretty fully-utilised year, 575 would bring in £130K gross. Using a few standard tricks, that could equate to £100K net. You'd need a decent bonus/health/etc package to bring £100K basic up to that level, surely.
Unless you used EBTs, in which case it might end up equating to £30K p.a...'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!
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The only way i can think of to achieve 100k take home out of 130k gross without using shoddy schemes is, if instead of parallelmonogamist you are parallelpoligamist with 3 spouses sharing YourCo ownership and not having any additional income streams.Originally posted by parallelmonogamist View PostI reckon if you're working less than 30 weeks a year, that might be sensible. Otherwise no way. :-)
A pretty fully-utilised year, 575 would bring in £130K gross. Using a few standard tricks, that could equate to £100K net. You'd need a decent bonus/health/etc package to bring £100K basic up to that level, surely.
Unless you used EBTs, in which case it might end up equating to £30K p.a...Comment
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If you are going to guarantee that you contract with no downtime, then you can bank on your £130k a year of invoicing. If you aren't, and someone comes along and offers a basic salary of £100k to be based from home, I know I'd struggle to walk away from it.Originally posted by parallelmonogamist View PostI reckon if you're working less than 30 weeks a year, that might be sensible. Otherwise no way. :-)
A pretty fully-utilised year, 575 would bring in £130K gross. Using a few standard tricks, that could equate to £100K net. You'd need a decent bonus/health/etc package to bring £100K basic up to that level, surely.
Unless you used EBTs, in which case it might end up equating to £30K p.a...
I don't know all the reasons he took the job, but if they offered me the same deal (and I know they won't) then I'd be logging out of here pretty sharpish.Comment
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In which year? And that's sort of the point. For contracting to be a long-term proposition, particularly for a specialist like the OP, you need to take the rough with the smooth and account for that over a longer period by building a warchest etc. A specialist that extracts everything each year is going to find themselves in pretty bad shape during the lean years, once they (and probably their family) have become accustomed to a certain lifestyle. Speaking from experience analogous to the OP, a daily rate of 575 is, on average, going to be ballpark similar to a 90-100k permie income but, for this to work out, you need quite a few good years of contracting, and the early years are generally tougher (not always, of course). So, everything depends on the time horizon over which you evaluate this. No doubt, a short-term gig on 575pd will beat a 100k permie salary if you extract everything and stay busy. But that's pretty irrelevant IMHO.Originally posted by parallelmonogamist View PostI reckon if you're working less than 30 weeks a year, that might be sensible. Otherwise no way. :-)
A pretty fully-utilised year, 575 would bring in £130K gross. Using a few standard tricks, that could equate to £100K net. You'd need a decent bonus/health/etc package to bring £100K basic up to that level, surely.
Unless you used EBTs, in which case it might end up equating to £30K p.a...Comment
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Just do it, this is from someone who contracted for many years, went permy for 2.5 years, f**king hate it and now just want out back to contracting again. Permy sucks big, big time.I like big butts and I cannot lie.Comment
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SJD say take-home can be 75-80%, so not sure it's that unrealistic.Originally posted by northernladuk View PostQuite a few unrealistic assumptions in there and a load that aren't mentioned but if that's the view you want to take of it then feel free.Comment
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CAN be. That's best case so all depends on situation.Originally posted by parallelmonogamist View PostSJD say take-home can be 75-80%, so not sure it's that unrealistic.'CUK forum personality of 2011 - Winner - Yes really!!!!
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That's a good figure assuming you don't have many more overheads than an employed person. Also you save a lot of tax on purchases, including VAT. Not to be sniffed at.Originally posted by northernladuk View PostCAN be. That's best case so all depends on situation.
So we have a conservative view and now a rosey but not unrealistic view. :-)
Think I'll leave it at that or we'll end up with a cross-border fight! ;-)Comment
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