The God Poster
LWO representa
So brehs I got offered a job that is salaried. Never had one, mainly been hourly. Wanted see what yall think is better. And how do taxes work with salary



As far as I know, there aren't any tax differences between being a salaried worker and an hourly worker.
What you should be concerned with is what benefits you receive as a salaried worker.
Health and Life Insurance benefits tend to differ between salaried and hourly employees. Or union and non-union employees.
You should also have a 401k or some sort of pension benefit.
All of this and if you have any contacts in the company I would check to see how many hours they work on the regular. I was lucky enough to end up in a salaried job that would pay money for extra time put in regardless until they recently started hitting was with the line that we're on salary so deal with it. But yeah a lot of companies fukk their salaried employees over with the crazy hours. So a big part of it is the difference in pay.
Enjoy your 100+ hrs every 2 weeks......




40k is before taxes.@Raul So i meant for example if they say 40k a year....but is that after or before taxes
@Black Jesus @threattonature @Crakface @Ciggavelli i dont think hours are too bad as its 8-5. And its more then im making now. But. I def aint bout the slave life![]()
@Raul So i meant for example if they say 40k a year....but is that after or before taxes
@Black Jesus @threattonature @Crakface @Ciggavelli i dont think hours are too bad as its 8-5. And its more then im making now. But. I def aint bout the slave life![]()
40k is before taxes.
I don't know what the tax rate is. It would be around $20 per hour...but again, that's before taxes.
You could look it up but my guess is that the tax rate at that salary bracket is around 35%.
I suppose there can be abuse with overworking salaried employees, but I think it happens a lot to hourly employees, too.
I've had jobs where I'd work late as an hourly employee and the boss would have me come in the next day a few hours later than usual. Or they would let me leave a few hours early to balance the hours out.
Now that might sound nice to some people, but essentially what that is doing is preventing you from getting overtime pay. So that's...sort of like...salary theft.
And some salaried employees can put in for overtime. I can at my job, but I rarely do. Sometimes it depends on your band level within the company...whether you're classified as exempt or non-exempt.
Every job is different so I guess he has to look into it.