Let's say you are a jack of all trades .NET developer with nothing special about your skillset. Five years experiences and you are earning £35,000 with a take home pay of about £27,000. That is the average developer salary in the UK.
Now consider that in your area the market rate for such a contractor is about £300/day, maybe £350. Well, and working on the assumption that you will be working 7 months per year (which is a rule of thumb I have read), your take home pay would be about £35,000 per year. I know there are no certainties with this as taxation and contracting, along with rates and work, are uncertain, but let's try and have a discussion here.
That would have you £8,000 per year better off. That's not to be sniffed at, but it's not exactly a huge amount if you are in contracting primarily for the money.
Am I completely off the mark here or is this what contracting has to offer? I have only begun looking into it with real intent recently, but I am not sure it's worth the hassle for that kind of pay rise.
Now consider that in your area the market rate for such a contractor is about £300/day, maybe £350. Well, and working on the assumption that you will be working 7 months per year (which is a rule of thumb I have read), your take home pay would be about £35,000 per year. I know there are no certainties with this as taxation and contracting, along with rates and work, are uncertain, but let's try and have a discussion here.
That would have you £8,000 per year better off. That's not to be sniffed at, but it's not exactly a huge amount if you are in contracting primarily for the money.
Am I completely off the mark here or is this what contracting has to offer? I have only begun looking into it with real intent recently, but I am not sure it's worth the hassle for that kind of pay rise.
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