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Work in Ireland
03-02-2015, 01:06 PM
Looking for your experiences and opinions on working and living in Ireland, because I´m thinking about moving to there for work.
I researched quit a lot, but I trust people here on this forum more than I do others on the internet.
My calculations bring me at the following numbers (euros per month) :
-500 rent (with roommate)
-100 electricity, water, garbage etc.
-100 transportation
-200 food
-30 cell phone
-50 Internet
-100 various expenses
Total expenses around 1100 – Pay for minimum wage 1800 = 700 leftover for spending
This is all approximation, but if I missed something or miscalculated feel free to say. All advices are welcomed.
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Work in Ireland
03-02-2015, 01:13 PM
Well, there's Dublin and then there's Ireland. This is especially true with regards to living expenses.
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Work in Ireland
03-02-2015, 03:41 PM
Thank you all for replies. This definitely helps in my decision.
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Work in Ireland
03-02-2015, 04:11 PM
You should avoid making decisions based on general stats like minimum wage and instead look at what your field pays - what is it you do or what to do?
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Work in Ireland
03-02-2015, 04:27 PM
What part of Ireland are you moving to and what are you planning on doing. If you work in IT, pharmaceutical or healthcare Ireland is maybe good but its competitive roght now and definetly not booming. Please give more details.
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Work in Ireland
03-02-2015, 04:55 PM
Dublin is probably your best option. Cork would be second.
It will be tough, Ireland is still recovering and jobs are scarce.
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Work in Ireland
03-05-2015, 10:25 AM
Pharma is big too in Ireland. And good money as well.
Huge multinational sector in Ireland, particularly in IT and there's ongoing recruitment.
Public sector jobs often go to Irish natives, seems to be more of a 'who you know' culture there (unlike the private sector which takes on as many non-Irish as natives)
Wages are reasonably good, compared to much of Western Europe, but there's a lot of taxes and charges here in Ireland, which will take 50%-55% off your gross salary.
Quality of life can be quite good though, so long as you have some kind of social circle.
People say Ireland is friendly but they're talking about the countryside and small towns.
The cities are less so (perhaps Galway is an exception), but I've found some of the towns in the West very warm and friendly (Westport, Clifden, Sligo).
The fact that it's a small country has some great advantages, you're never very far from anywhere else in the country and the train/bus/road network has improved in recent times.
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Work in Ireland
03-06-2015, 06:27 AM
@Truth Seeker Good point, I forgot about that, as most people I know are on more than 33,800 per annum.
Low wage earners are looked after pretty well here, and social welfare handouts are some of the highest in Europe.
Which unfortunately makes us a magnet for welfare spongers!
On the flip side, if you lose your job in Ireland, and can't get another anytime soon, then you're in trouble, as there are no parachute payments like in some other European countries.
So if you're on say 55 grand a year, and lose your job, you will get the exact same amount per week as Joe Sponge, who possibly hasn't worked a day in his life.
There's a lot of good things about Ireland, but this is not one of them!
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Work in Ireland
03-05-2018, 03:01 PM
Bumping this old thread.
I am in an interview process for a semi-senior business development position within a major IT multinational, at their EMEA HQ in Dublin.
I was wondering if somebody who is familiar with the city could give me a reasonable salary range I could be expecting for a role of this type? I'm not based in Ireland or even Western Europe, so I have no reference point, and I haven't been told yet either (early stages).
How is Dublin for somebody with a young family (wife and 2 babies)? Recommended or best stay away unless millionaire?
Thanks!
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Work in Ireland
03-06-2018, 10:57 AM
If you work for a large multinational you will need to be careful what you say. You will meet a lot of people that will use anything you say against you to further their careers over yours, be careful what you drink/say on work nights out.
If you are looking for like minded people join the social club at work, after a few nights out you will get to know who the dickheads are and who you can be more open with. Try and get to know those ones very well and they will introduce you to more of the same types of people.
In Ireland you can sit down in any pub and say what you like for the most part, conversation wise anything goes if there are no women around, women here tend to be fairly touchy so be careful around them.
You can open a conversation with anybody here and you will be well received, its not considered weird or strange like it would be in other locations so dont be afraid to go to your local pub by yourself to catch a football game, its normal for guys to do that especially if they have families and want a chance to get away and unwind.
Irish guys tend to be pretty sound for the most part, guess thats why we travel so well, our women on the other hand are a different story so again be careful what you say around them.
He who dares wins - Del Boy