Originally posted by northernladuk
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Previously on "Flippity-Flop: Weighing up a Return to Contracting"
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Originally posted by oliverson View PostI REALLY hate the title of this thread, conjuring up the image of some upper-middle class tosser who probably doesn't have to work but is just playing at it.
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I REALLY hate the title of this thread, conjuring up the image of some upper-middle class tosser who probably doesn't have to work but is just playing at it.
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Originally posted by fiisch View PostSome of the responses inspired me to have the difficult conversation and push back on the "development opportunity" of a promotion with none of the payrise. Cue a 10% increase, which takes me to just below the ton (which I want to stay under due to young kids/tax free childcare/60% stealth tax).
With respect to the part in bold, just want to stress that there are plenty of ways to avoid the tax and benefits pitfalls that may come with exceeding 100k in income - additional contributions to your SIPP being the most straightforward. The 100k cut-off threshold for TFC, free childcare hours, personal savings allowance, etc. are all based on the Adjusted Net Income (crudely salary less gross pension contributions) so with a 60k pension annual allowance, you'd have to earn a lot more than 100k PAYE to genuinely run out of options.
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Originally posted by fiisch View Post
Thanks again for pointers - if nothing else, this thread helped me get a payrise for a role I'd otherwise have done at same salary, albeit begrudgingly. Lesson learned to be more direct in future...
I think its the right move tbh.
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Looks like I'll be staying in the safe seat... For now.
Some of the responses inspired me to have the difficult conversation and push back on the "development opportunity" of a promotion with none of the payrise. Cue a 10% increase, which takes me to just below the ton (which I want to stay under due to young kids/tax free childcare/60% stealth tax).
Meanwhile, I had interview #1 (former client, £600 p/d outside IR35) and the programme sounded in disarray - interview was with a contractor and a consultant for a company who's agreement with the client was ending in 2 weeks, and was told project was currently on hold and subject to replanning. This made my spidey senses tingle, as there's always a possibility programme gets shelved before I even set foot in the building, and why is a third party who is coming to the end of their involvement asked to be involved in hiring process..?!
Interview #2 invitation (£750 p/d, inside IR35), multi-year programme and for a company I was quite excited to work with. However, one of the interviewers is a former hiring manager for a disastrous fixed term contract I had during Covid (I literally got forgotten about and paid for sitting around doing nothing, which is far more depressing than it sounds), which has completely put me off.
I have another couple of interview invitations pending on slightly higher day rates but less established companies in my industry, but with the uprated job title and 10% payrise I'm inclined to agree with the advice I was given at the start of this thread and stay in a safe permie seat.
Thanks again for pointers - if nothing else, this thread helped me get a payrise for a role I'd otherwise have done at same salary, albeit begrudgingly. Lesson learned to be more direct in future...
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Sorry yes should've said 10+ approaches, basically I'd say you need to be popping up in peoples searches and for them to contact you regularly to be sure that work is there, available, whenever you like. That, or have a raft of older clients needing work, who you cooperate with on a regular basis.
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Originally posted by dsc View PostI always say that if you get gig offers coming in at rate of say 10+ per month and they are genuine offers not some silly made up tulipe, then going contracting might be worth it. If you get an offer of a contract once every 6 months, and outside of this you get absolutely nothing, then your skillset is simply not needed enough to easily walk into a new contract when your new one is done. And never ever assume that contracting income means 220*day rate per year and then go to compare that to a safe permanent position (unless you have super hot skills as I mentioned before).
Bit about not assuming you will work all the time is fair comment though.
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I always say that if you get gig offers coming in at rate of say 10+ per month and they are genuine offers not some silly made up tulipe, then going contracting might be worth it. If you get an offer of a contract once every 6 months, and outside of this you get absolutely nothing, then your skillset is simply not needed enough to easily walk into a new contract when your new one is done. And never ever assume that contracting income means 220*day rate per year and then go to compare that to a safe permanent position (unless you have super hot skills as I mentioned before).
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Originally posted by fiisch View PostI've also been promoted this morning, but no payrise attaching to this, which is an added boot in the teeth
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Originally posted by fiisch View PostI know as a third party, I'd read this thread and scream at the OP to stay in his cushty permie job, but truth be told I'm bored and frustrated. My current role is in a slightly different area of my industry that I find less interesting, and I'm bored, and I'm ****ed off. I've also been promoted this morning, but no payrise attaching to this, which is an added boot in the teeth. So screw this, I suspect I'll be a contractor again in the not-so-distant future...
Two interviews lined up this week - one Inside, one Outside, both exciting projects. I daren't ask how I go about comparing Inside vs Outside rates......
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Originally posted by fiisch View PostI know as a third party, I'd read this thread and scream at the OP to stay in his cushty permie job, but truth be told I'm bored and frustrated. My current role is in a slightly different area of my industry that I find less interesting, and I'm bored, and I'm ****ed off. I've also been promoted this morning, but no payrise attaching to this, which is an added boot in the teeth. So screw this, I suspect I'll be a contractor again in the not-so-distant future...
Time to quiet quit i think...
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I know as a third party, I'd read this thread and scream at the OP to stay in his cushty permie job, but truth be told I'm bored and frustrated. My current role is in a slightly different area of my industry that I find less interesting, and I'm bored, and I'm ****ed off. I've also been promoted this morning, but no payrise attaching to this, which is an added boot in the teeth. So screw this, I suspect I'll be a contractor again in the not-so-distant future...
Two interviews lined up this week - one Inside, one Outside, both exciting projects. I daren't ask how I go about comparing Inside vs Outside rates......
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Originally posted by fiisch View PostThank you for inputs - I appreciate the differences (I enjoyed the good, bad and ugly in my relatively short (5 yrs) spell as a contractor) - in, out and FTC.
This post was more about settling an argument with my wife - I recall from the beforetimes of IR35 there was a loose formula (day rate multiplied by X) which gave a rough approximation of what was an equivalent take home, taking into account void periods, holiday etc., albeit a very rough guide.
My original intention had been to use this formula to beat my wife over the head and show that really my current pay means I'd be silly to revert to contracting.
However, as is often the case, I've started to come around to her way of thinking. Back of a fag packet maths:
- £90k salary, rough take home £4.8k + £1.1k pension = £5.9k net.
- An inside purportedly long-term contract - £750/day - £8.1k, assuming 8 weeks off, - £800 month commuting expenses = £7.3k net.
Playing Devil's Advocate, am I not significantly better off financially with the inside gig, and have added flexibility around how much I wish to take home/pay into pension, and how much holiday I wish to take.
Either you want to go contracting or you dont. All this 'wife wants' stuff is just a smokescreen.
Jib your permie job off and see how much better off you are in 12 months time even with an IR35 inside job then compare!
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