10k is "a hefty savings"? That money is gone very quickly if you have a family and a mortgage, etc.
I don't think 10k would change anything, I would still need to hurry to get a job.
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10k is "a hefty savings"? That money is gone very quickly if you have a family and a mortgage, etc.
I don't think 10k would change anything, I would still need to hurry to get a job.
I hate that it's true, but $10K is not a hefty savings anymore.
That's not to say most people have $10k saved.
That's just to say that $10k would get me through like 4 months, maximum.
And Id be hungry.
10k hefty savings lmao
I would be broke in about 4 months with $10K in reserve if I dialed back everything to the bare minimum. It would make my job search extremely urgent.
I would be broke in 2 months or less ... life got expensive quick where I live. I wonder where OP lives?
Hefty savings? $10k? Is that us dollars? 10k is not much, that would not last more than a few months at most for most people
Everyone in the comment section is just talking about how much 10K is to them and completely ignoring OPs question lol smh
How much 10k is to you is relevant to the question. For some of us that's a month, for some that's six months. It makes a difference to how you respond.
If I had 10k and no job, I'd be panicking and rushing to get whatever job I can get!
$10k is not very much money to live on where rent alone is $2000~2500. I think if I had $100k I would be very picky. Or better yet, I would try to start my own business.
Yeah Im jealous of OP that in their area that's "hefty" in my area that would cover maybe 2 months expenses if you were being frugal, certainly it wouldn't be "restart your career savings"
I have more savings than that and I don't think it's enough. Those are rookie numbers, gotta pump those up.
hefty savings of 10k
That is not a "hefty savings."
You want to have enough savings for about 3 months expenses, for just such an occasion, so I'd just do my normal job hunt here
Oof 10k
What everyone in this comment section calling out "10k isn't much" are failing to understand is that over 60% of the USA live paycheck to paycheck and don't have any savings to speak of. Extend that to the world and you would go pale.
Check your privilege and get educated.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/paycheck-to-paycheck-6-in-10-americans-lendingclub/
https://www.lendingtree.com/debt-consolidation/paycheck-to-paycheck-survey/
...everyone's point isn't "wow you suck for having only 10k in savings". Everyone calling out the OP is saying "in my country/area cost of living is very high and with 10K in savings I would be in a bit of a panic".
Also telling people to "get educated" while they react to the US cost of living being out of control just makes you sound like a dick.
There are people earning 10k/month who are living paycheck to paycheck, so for them 10k saving is just one month
Between my mortgage, child support, and kids college tuition, that would be gone in a month.
However if it were a hefty amount, nothing would change. I’ve never taken intentional time off between jobs and I still wouldn’t. Unless it were a life changing, lottery winning, early retirement amount of money, I’d be too anxious about where I’m getting paid next. I would not enjoy time off
10k will last you about 3 months comfortably, 6 if you're single and willing to scrimp or live in your car. That's your time limit to get a new job.
I had about 3x that saved and took a year off after working a decade at my previous position (I was pretty burnt out and hadn't been able to take more than a week off since I started). Having that padding gave me the time and peace of mind to look for something I really wanted, and gave me the freedom to turn down offers that would have put me back into the burnout cycle.
I ended up with a full WFH position with a 50% bump in salary. Within a year, I made back what I had spent simply by maintaining my budget from my previous salary.
If I hadn't had the cushion, it would have been pedal to the metal and accepting the first position offered, and I would have likely hit burnout before a year was out.
I have been unemployed for almost a year now and was looking the entire time. Burned through severance and savings. Sooooo you better not slouch because shits tough for anyone but entry/associate level.
Having savings gives you some time before you have to get something part time to help out with bills. When you're between jobs, it's not vacation time. Your job is too find another job. You should spend the 8 hours or so you would have spent working instead preparing your resume, brushing up on interview skills, searching for and applying to jobs, and responding to emails. Depending on your field there may be some short term contract work available that will help you pay the bills while you look for something permanent. The point is: don't just sit on your butt, get it in gear.
I quit my job 90 days ago. The day I quit I had a ticket to the galapagos islands booked for 3 weeks of travel there. I took my time when I got back to get everything in order and relax. I ticked off 2 more national parks in the PNW and got a lot of mountain biking done.
Once I got back my job search was looking for companies and projects that I think are likely to turn into something. I went through a lot of interview rounds before I accepted a job offer a few days ago for a non-profit in biomedical data.
Literally just had this situation.
I still looked for jobs, but since I had a good 3 months of buffer I wasn't hard pressed to take any shotty offers, and was able to accurately apply the algorithm for the Suitors Problem.
Google the Suitors Problem solution for the efficient way to search for jobs and minax your odds of getting a good offer.
I got burnt out between my last job and my current one. I quit and took 3 months off before starting my current job.
Admittedly I had ~30k saved and went through about 15k of that in the 3 months as I went travelling etc. but I wasn't stressed. I emailed some friends and shot some old colleagues on linkedin saying I was looking. An old friend got me an interview in the first month, went through the whole process in about 2 weeks after that and had a new job lined up 1 month before I was due back home. But I didn't have that "Oh shit, I need to start my new job ASAP! I'm fucked!!!" panic which was nice.
I was also much more relaxed in the interviews etc. because I wasn't panicking for work, instead I became super picky about what I wanted and was very open about it. Asked for more money, was open about what I actually want to do and it all worked out. It was amazing - in the past I was more trying to escape a bad workplace vs. going "I know what I want, can you make this work for both of us?"
I did this poorly, i had almost 20g saved, and i went on trips, explored, and adventured, then the final week of money, went and handed out 3 resumes and got hired on the spot with the 3rd.
Sounds like you did it perfectly, if you can save 20grand you can do it again but you’ll never have those trips at that age again.
I’d become an Uber driver, and I’d only take jobs that were 100% definitely better than that. I’d make sure to earn everything I needed so that my $10k isn’t drawn down.
Having the space to reject jobs and take one’s time is an excellent resource during a job search. A nice long one.
10k isn't going to last long, I would be freaking out applying for every job I could if that's all the money I had available.