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£550/day vs £70k

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    #31
    Originally posted by JamJarST View Post
    You still could have made more in a Ltd inside IR35.
    it is coming, I need a few things to calm down so I can dedicate some time to getting it set up

    looking at the IR35 checklist I fail on some major points so assumed that even going through an LTD i'd be hit for the 40% tax rate
    sufficiently advanced stupidity is indistinguishable from malice - Asimov (sort of)

    there is no art in a factory, not even in an art factory - Mixerman

    everyone is stupid some of the time - trad.

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      #32
      I've just traded in my £450 a day contract role for a £76k (that figure includes pension etc.) a year permie job as it means I can work from home 95% of the time.

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        #33
        crikey that's good....

        it all depends on skill set and market doesn't it (and a bit of luck)
        I'm on £400 - sometimes it's £450 or even more, but usually in the £350 to £450 bracket and I'm struggling to find a perm role at £45K .....at £75K I'd bit their arm off.

        well done

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          #34
          Originally posted by Olly View Post
          crikey that's good....

          it all depends on skill set and market doesn't it (and a bit of luck)
          I'm on £400 - sometimes it's £450 or even more, but usually in the £350 to £450 bracket and I'm struggling to find a perm role at £45K .....at £75K I'd bit their arm off.

          well done
          Cheers Olly (I was expecting to get caned on here for my decision so the first post being a congratulatory one was a nice surprise). To be honest, for my skillset and the role I was arguably a little underpaid at £450 a day but the permie offer is undoubtedly a good one. It was still a very difficult decision though; by the time pension comes out and then tax it's a big drop in income but I'm happy it's the right move for me at this time.

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            #35
            Sounds like a good decision. All these need to be a personal decision because when you factor in families, need for stability etc it's a very different decision to being single/younger.
            Also, as you get a bit older and more experienced it becomes more of a ballache to not be able to influence how things are setup and done, perm job at the right level can give you this IF you can settle into it after contracting and that's a big IF.

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              #36
              perm vs contract

              Sometimes being a permie does have benefits (shock horror)

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                #37
                It would take a 2-year bench stint, plus electrodes on the Jacobs, to ever make me go permie.
                Kneel before Bod

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                  #38
                  I've also taken the plunge to permiedom...well...I will be in a month or so (just onemore contract )
                  400/day to 63.5k and no problem with working from home a couple of days a week.
                  We'll see how it goes.....already feel a bit trapped by it and not started yet but it's a good chance to get my skills up and get closer to enterprise architecture
                  Your friendly neighbourhood VirtualMonkey - Not giving financial advice since...well...ever.

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                    #39
                    Personally I'd take the contract, as after a year they may ask you if you would like to go permi. This gives you a year to figure out if the company is one you want to work for.

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                      #40
                      Originally posted by bigcod View Post
                      Personally I'd take the contract, as after a year they may ask you if you would like to go permi. This gives you a year to figure out if the company is one you want to work for and earn a load more than the permies who are there.
                      FTFY
                      Never has a man been heard to say on his death bed that he wishes he'd spent more time in the office.

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