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Topic: Engineer-contractor pay range (Read 9379 times)
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z.james37
Very Lite User
Posts: 8
Karma: 2
Engineer-contractor pay range
«
on:
Dec 12, 2012, 04:27 »
Hello
I am a nuclear engineer with 8-10 years of experience with background in electrical/mechanical/licensing areas (different projects-different responsebilities over time). I am contemplating in becoming a consultant/contractor but do not know what an appropriate billing rate is for someone like me. All questions below assume there are no benefits.
Is $80 an hour + per diem for a 1-year contract reasonable?
What about jobs where you can work from home (e.g, an MCNP calc)- no per diem, but should the billing rate change to reflect the benefit of working from home?
Should one charge more for projects that are only a month or two in duration? - I am thinking that longer term projects are more desirable (hence cpmpensation is lower) but maybe I got this one wrong...
thanks for any feedback
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dea
Light User
Posts: 33
Karma: 4
Re: Engineer-contractor pay range
«
Reply #1 on:
Dec 12, 2012, 07:14 »
Looks like $80/hr is at the high end, check this site
http://www.gcservices.com/
it's one of the few sites that I have seen that actually shows compensation rates.
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ski2313
Guest
Re: Engineer-contractor pay range
«
Reply #2 on:
Dec 13, 2012, 07:20 »
Pair of pay ranges I've seen for contractors, that might be considered long term (18-24 months):
procedure writer for uprate AOPs/EOPs = $80/hr no per diem
Ops training instructor = $105/hr plus $100/d per diem
Just as a disclaimer, these two guys had about 70 years of nuke experience between them, probably makes a difference.
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z.james37
Very Lite User
Posts: 8
Karma: 2
Re: Engineer-contractor pay range
«
Reply #3 on:
Dec 14, 2012, 01:10 »
Thanks guys - for someone like me the number i used does seem to be in the uper range..(even though I would most definitely deserve that pay hehe)...this contracting stuff is interesting though - I could take half a year off and make the same amount of money as working an equivalent full time job...time to make my prons/cons list in excel...
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tr
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Posts: 179
Karma: 218
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Re: Engineer-contractor pay range
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Reply #4 on:
Jan 04, 2013, 09:52 »
Don't forget to include the benefits (vacation, holidays, sick time, 401k matching, health insurance rates, etc) you currently get in the spreadsheet. They usually add up to a number that is larger than most people think.
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