I think this is mostly a US thing. Why use yearly salary? You’re not paid once a year, are you? Most likely once a month. Referencing monthly salary makes much more sense.

“I’m making 50k”. Great, now I have to guess - dollars? Monthly? Yearly? If yearly then what’s the monthly paycheck? Net? Gross?

3 points

I think most answered your question with one exception. Dollars? What else you expect it in? Cats?

(Ignoring you will want it in the country of your residence)

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8 points

“I’m making 50k”. Great, now I have to guess - dollars? Monthly? Yearly? If yearly then what’s the monthly paycheck? Net? Gross?

I mean surely it’s obvious in that example, no?

dollars

If that’s the native currency wherever you are, then of course dollars

Monthly? Yearly?

$50k/month about be $600k/year. Pretty sure you’d be able to tell if the person you’re talking to made half a million dollars a year vs just above the poverty line (in the US at least) just from context, but when in doubt - it’s probably safe to assume that the person you’re talking to isnt in the top 1% of earners

If yearly then what’s the monthly paycheck?

Yearly divided by 12? If you’re in a hurry and want a rough estimate just chop a number off the right and that’ll get you to within ~10% of the correct value

Net? Gross?

I’ve literally never heard anyone give their salary as gross outside the context of financial planning, and even then they’ll always specify “after taxes” or something similar.

Other comments go into plenty of detail about why they se various conventions are what they are (yearly vs monthly, net vs gross, etc(

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3 points

I’ve literally never heard anyone give their salary as gross outside the context of financial planning, and even then they’ll always specify “after taxes” or something similar.

You mean net here, not gross. Otherwise, agree.

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1 point

Haha woops - mixed up the terms, thanks!

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5 points

What’s up with yearly salaries not keeping up with inflation?

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3 points

If you know the yearly, then that is the allotted amount in the company budget for you. So, in the big picture, you are being paid yearly. Especially if you are salary or contract. I have switched to making a yearly budget with monthly categories, and the yearly costs are much easier to factor into. My budget became more simplified and less stressful. Also, another benefit is that I save for an average cost that is usually higher than most months, and the high cost months are less troublesome to plan for.

I try to calculate net income: deductions and taxes removed from gross income. Overall, I feel better as I can plan ahead of time and don’t need to do it every month. Still need to keep an eye on following the plan and for anything that changes it. I don’t just plan it either, I execute it.

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6 points
*

In France, people are sometimes paid 13/14 months a year. It means you get two months as a bonus, so it’s relevant in this case to tell the yearly salary

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1 point

True, and funnily enough french people don’t use yearly gross. Most of the time they use monthly net, and, in the context of salary negotiations, will specify over how many months. E.g. “2000 net sur 13 mois”

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