I'm contemplating leaving my current location (Western Europe) to expatriate.
I have lived and worked jobs in London when I was a student and I'm looking to move back as I like the country and its culture (compared to where I am now).<p>I'm just worried that the living expenses aren't worth the move and that I would be better off looking into other destinations like Germany, the Netherlands or perhaps even Sweden ?<p>What's your take on this ?<p>Cheers
High cost of living areas benefit SWEs and other in-demand professionals. I imagine they aren’t as good as mid-sized cities for commodity careers due to the cost of living.<p>Disclaimer here: I don’t know anything about London. And I won’t talk about Brexit, that’s a separate and important consideration.<p>The higher salary will almost certainly make up for the cost of living.<p>You just need to do the math. The information is readily available. Find salary information for your role and experience level, and then jump on real estate websites and find out how much rentals costs near some of those employees.<p>I thought San Francisco was crazy until I did the math. Sure, the rent is $5000 a month or higher, but that’s only $48k a year more than a $1000 a month apartment in the Midwest United States. But you’re looking at a salary difference of over $100k, maybe even $200k, and all that extra money means extra savings that could be taken to a cheaper city when you retire, or help you retire faster.<p>Not only that, but everything that comes from a factory, and things like plane tickets all stay the same price while your salary is way higher.<p>I personally think going from a mid-size city to a larger one is appealing. Larger cities have more things to do, more ways to explore niche interests, and better transit.<p>There are downsides but I think some adjustment is all you need. For one, you have to take your personal belongings seriously. If you have a suburban habit of storing a bunch of stuff you don’t need, you will need to change that. If you can learn to live in a smaller space and enjoy it that’ll go really far in allowing you to benefit from the extra salary without throwing it all away on housing.
The view I have in memory of London are trains full of commuters from the outer villages, most standing and all seating places taken. Paying an absurd share of their salaries on this bloody train tickets. You could be more lucky in finding an extraordinarily well paid job and simultanously an affordable (in London terms) housing nearby, but yeah... good luck.
There seem to be only two locations in Europe where software engineering pays reasonable money: London, and Zurich. See <a href="https://www.itjobswatch.co.uk" rel="nofollow">https://www.itjobswatch.co.uk</a> to get an idea of salaries.<p>London has lots of downsides, but you can expect a reasonable career.<p>Also if you have aspirations to move to the USA, you can work for a FAANG company and then get a transfer to a US office in a few years on an L1 visa.<p>This is now the only practical way to get into the US to work since the H1B visa system is completely broken.
There are plenty of good software engineering jobs in London (with higher salaries to offset the higher cost of living), but if I were you I’d wait until the dust has settled from Brexit before you decide whether you really want to move here. Some of my London friends are making the move in the opposite direction.
If your only concern is making money then yes, you can make a lot there. Otherwise no: (IMHO) overpopulated, more insecure every day, expensive, bureaucracy, not so good transport, Brexit, potentially devaluated currency in the near future, no proper food culture, weather and then other personal subjective reasons that I wouldn't write here.<p>On a side note, I'd suggest to look for something else than money unless you have a very specific project or reason in mind. I made the mistake of taking a job because of the high compensation and benefits on a different country and made me miserable because everything else wasn't worth it - not even the job. Choose wisely, as you'll be the one living it and not us.
London is about to experience two things: Brexit, and the private sector reform of IR35 legislation (for contract work). Both will affect the job market there.<p>Arguably the latter will be felt worse in the coming months, as Brexit has already been accounted for by many companies.
London is expensive as you remember, but salaries are high to offset that somewhat. There is a booming tech and fintech market in London too so I think your skills are in demand. It could be a good move for a few years, but that depends on your long-term plans.
I did this - moved from Western Europe to London a couple of years ago as a SWE.<p>Initial compensation was a bit more than before but expenses were much higher (back than I was in doubt where I made the right decision).<p>Now I'm making much(!!!) more than when I moved here, and life is great.
Other countries (except Switzerland) won't be able to pay salaries as high as you'll get in London.
Depending on what sort of Software you want to work on, consider Cambridge (UK). There is a busy tech sector in what is called 'Silicon Fen', but leans a little more towards embedded and hardware rather than web.
London itself has a pretty large range for living expenses. Zone 1 is going to be far more expensive for almost everything including even your groceries. If you are willing to commute a little on the tube, your rent and other expenses can be a lot lower. So it's not an easy question to answer because a lot depends on the specifics of what you want.
At least in the US, for me Silicon Valley was only "worth it" as a young, single, professional.<p>Once I met my spouse and started having kids, Silicon Valley became way too expensive.<p>If you're young, and have no spouse or kids, the experience alone might be "worth it," even if you have to live in a tiny apartment and only stay in London for a short time.
If you plan to undertake any consulting / contracting opportunities have a look at IR35 - it's about to be introduced in April and will most possibly cause a lot of turmoil in London's tech sector. Might be worth to consider this when making a decision.
You should really compare it directly to your other options. I recently moved to London from the north of England and was also somewhat reluctant at first exactly because of the higher cost and possibly lower quality of life.
Hi guys, can I also ask in general is it hard to find a programming job in London now?<p>My Background: a javascript (node/react) dev with 2 yrs of exp, a EU(portugal) passport holder living in Hong Kong
i used to work in London and live in Cambridgeshire area. the salaries are not that good compared to the extremely high cost of living. I moved to Scotland as the cost of living to earning ratio is much better
Just be aware that dealing with UK bureaucracy is a special kind of hell - doubly so if the bureaucracy in question is the Home Office. If you don't have an iron-clad way of making sure you don't have significant bureaucratic entanglements over immigration, I'd be wary.