Pay, Package and Work-Life Balance

Why On-Call Work Can Be a Hidden Cost

Why On-Call Work Can Be a Hidden Cost

This article is part of the Pay, Package and Work-Life Balance guide.

On-call work is a feature of many roles in facilities management, engineering, field service and related sectors. The compensation is usually written into the contract. The real costs are usually not.

What on-call actually costs

Standby anxiety. Being on-call — even on quiet nights — creates a state of semi-availability that prevents full relaxation. Many workers report that on-call weekends are not restful, even when no calls come.

Relationship impact. On-call obligations affect partners and families, not just the individual. Plans cannot be made reliably. Social commitments are hedged with "unless I get called." This is a household burden, not just a personal one.

Sleep disruption. Night-time callouts — even infrequent ones — have a compounding effect on sleep quality and daytime performance.

The effective hourly rate. An on-call allowance of £50 per week for being available 24/7 on two out of four weekends is not generous compensation for what is being asked.

How to evaluate on-call in a job offer

Ask these questions:

  • How many days per month are you genuinely on-call?
  • How often are you actually called out on those days?
  • What is the typical response time required and typical duration of a callout?
  • How is the compensation structured — flat allowance, per-callout, overtime rate?
  • Is on-call frequency expected to increase or decrease?

This information allows you to make an honest assessment of what the on-call obligation costs and whether the compensation reflects it.

Build My Wish List | Back to Pay, Package and Work-Life Balance

Leave a Comment