Originally posted by Scotchpie
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London Rates
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Originally posted by cojak View PostWhen I tried to book there they wanted my passport, since I don't need it when I'm booking other hotels I declined.Comment
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The hassle involved in working in London is not worth £400 a day, you can get around that in most big cities in the UK.Comment
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I felt the Travel Lodge Wifi charge a con, you pay for 24 hours, but you won't be using it when your on client site, but the clock stil ticks down. You come back to hotel and you only have an hour or two left.
Days Inn is free, if there are any nearby.
qhHe had a negative bluety on a quackhandle and was quadraspazzed on a lifeglug.
I look forward to your all knowing and likely sarcastic and unhelpful reply.
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£400/day is around, say, £92,000 a year gross revenue.
If it is a longer term contract you might be better off trying to rent a room in a shared house, perhaps a short train ride away.
The rate is low for London - but the fact that you agreed to it shows your inexperience and that's what the client is paying only £400 for. But you have your feet in the door - and well done on getting a role there - so hopefully the only way is up from here.Comment
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Originally posted by Unix View PostThe hassle involved in working in London is not worth £400 a day, you can get around that in most big cities in the UK.Comment
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Originally posted by Scotchpie View PostHi
Could anyone advise me on whether I've quoted too low on a contract. It's based in London (Canary Wharf) and I quoted £400 per day. It will cost £90 per week in travel and will require accommodation for 4 nights which I'm hoping will be within walking distance. I'm working as a Ltd company.
First time I've worked in London and after looking at accommodation on the web I'm now wondering if it was enough and whether to renegotiate the day rate. Even the Contractor Accommodation Service were quoting over £100 per day and they are meant to get good contractor rates.
So with £90 per week travel (train down from the North and tube fare) and 4 nights accommodation, is £400 per day doable?
Andrew
Buy a decent van and convert it to a stealth campervan on company expenses. You will have an asset that your limited company can sell to you personally as a tax loss."A people that elect corrupt politicians, imposters, thieves and traitors are not victims, but accomplices," George OrwellComment
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