Can You Really Afford That Pay Rise?
Be generous. But don’t be stupid.
Let’s start with the obvious: most business owners want to look after their team.
You know what it’s like to have good people — the ones who show up, handle problems, and give a damn. When they stick around, your life gets easier.
So when they ask about pay rises — or even when they don’t — you feel the pressure.
You want to do the right thing. Keep them happy. Reward loyalty. Be a decent boss.
But here’s the line I’d ask you not to cross:
Don’t say yes to a pay rise you can’t actually afford.
This Isn’t About Greed. It’s About Reality.
According to recent data, only 27% of small businesses plan to give pay rises in the next 12 months.
Not because they’re tight-fisted. Because they’ve done the maths.
You see, a £2,000 pay rise isn’t just £2,000.
Factor in National Insurance, pension, holiday pay, and you’re nudging closer to £2,400–£2,600.
And if you give it across the board? That’s tens of thousands in payroll costs — every year. Forever.
Why It Feels Harder Right Now
- The cost of living is still high — so staff expect more
- The job market is jittery — so you want to keep your best people
- The media narrative says “employers must do more”
- You don’t want to be seen as the one falling behind
But here’s the brutal truth: You can’t pay people with sentiment.
Wages are a fixed cost. If your revenue drops and your payroll doesn’t flex with it — you’re in trouble.
What To Do Instead
- Check your margins.
Don’t guess. Actually run the numbers. What does a 5% increase across all salaries look like? Can you sustain that with your current sales? - Talk honestly to your team.
They’re adults. Explain the financial position. Share what’s possible, not just what’s ideal. - Look at non-cash value.
Flexible hours. Training. Extra holidays. Remote options.
For many people, these are worth more than a few quid a month. - Don’t ignore the floor.
Minimum wage rises are coming in April. Even if you’re above it now, the gap is narrowing — and you’ll need to react.
A Word on Expectations
If you raise pay this year, you set a precedent.
Staff will expect more next year. That’s fine — if your business is growing. Dangerous, if it’s not.
Also: be careful of bracket creep.
Push someone into a higher tax band, and their take-home pay might not feel like a rise at all.
Cue resentment, confusion, and “I thought I was getting more” conversations.
My Advice? Be Clear, Not Clever
You don’t need to compete with Google or the NHS.
But you do need a plan. That might mean:
- Staggered rises based on performance
- One-off bonuses linked to profit
- A formal review every 12 months, not knee-jerk decisions
And if the answer this year is “not yet” — say so with honesty and a path forward.
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Final Word
Paying your staff fairly is good business.
But stretching your business to unsustainable levels just to “look generous” isn’t leadership — it’s self-sabotage.
Your team doesn’t need empty promises. They need a business that stays open, pays on time, and tells the truth.