Should You Move Jobs for Better Pay?
This article is part of the Pay, Package and Work-Life Balance guide.
Better pay is the most cited reason for changing jobs in skilled sectors. It is a completely legitimate reason to move. But "better pay" can mean very different things — and a move that looks financially better at first glance is not always better in practice.
When moving for better pay is straightforwardly the right decision
- Your salary has fallen meaningfully behind market rates and your employer will not address it
- A new role offers a materially higher base without significant trade-offs on other dimensions
- The total compensation (including package, benefits and conditions) is clearly better
- The new employer is stable and the improvement is likely to persist
When moving for better pay needs more scrutiny
- The pay increase is offset by higher travel costs, less favourable on-call compensation or a worse benefits package
- The new employer pays more now but has a history of pay freezes or redundancies
- The salary is higher but the role offers no progression — meaning your earning potential plateaus
- You are being offered above-market salary to take a role nobody else wants
How to evaluate a salary offer properly
Compare total compensation, not just base salary:
- Base salary + vehicle allowance or car value
- Pension contribution (employer percentage matters)
- Overtime and on-call rates
- Bonus potential and history
- Benefits (healthcare, fuel card, expenses)
Then assess sustainability: is this employer likely to maintain this salary, and is there a pathway to further increases?
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