Money & Budgeting

How to Negotiate a Pay Rise UK — Scripts, Strategies, and Timing

A practical guide to negotiating a salary increase in the UK. Includes scripts, timing advice, how to build your case, and what to do if you're rejected.

Asking for more money is uncomfortable — but it’s often the fastest way to increase your income. Here’s how to do it effectively.

Why You Should Negotiate

The Cost of Not Asking

Scenario10-Year Impact
Never negotiateBaseline salary
One successful 10% raise+£35,000-50,000 lifetime
Regular negotiation+£100,000+ lifetime

A single successful negotiation compounds over your career through percentage-based raises, bonuses, and pension contributions.

Most People Don’t Ask

FindingPercentage
Accepted first offer without negotiating55%
Asked for more and got something70% of those who asked
Employers expect negotiation80%+

The majority of people who ask get at least something — but most people never ask.

Before You Ask

1. Know Your Market Value

SourceHow to Use
Salary by job dataFind your role’s range
Income percentile calculatorSee where you rank
GlassdoorCheck company-specific data
LinkedInSee what similar roles pay
Job advertsCurrent market rates
RecruitersAsk what they’re seeing

2. Document Your Achievements

Evidence TypeExamples
Revenue generated“Brought in £X of new business”
Costs saved“Reduced spend by £X through…”
Projects delivered“Led X project on time/budget”
Problems solved“Fixed issue that was costing…”
Responsibilities gained“Took on X additional duties”
Skills developed“Completed X certification”
Positive feedbackEmails, reviews, testimonials

Be specific: “Improved customer satisfaction” is weak. “Increased NPS from 32 to 47, reducing churn by 15%” is strong.

3. Understand Your Company

FactorWhat to Research
Financial healthProfitable? Growing? Struggling?
Pay review cycleWhen do raises normally happen?
Budget timingWhen are budgets set?
Your manager’s authorityCan they approve, or escalate?
Recent raises givenWhat’s the precedent?

4. Calculate Your Ask

SituationReasonable Ask
Annual merit increase3-7%
Underpaid vs market10-20% (with evidence)
Significant new responsibilities10-15%
Promotion10-25%
Counter-offer to job offerMatch or exceed offer

Pro tip: Ask for slightly more than you want — negotiation typically meets in the middle.

Timing Your Request

Best Times to Ask

TimingWhy It Works
Annual review cycleExpected, budgeted for
After major achievementFresh evidence of value
When taking on moreTrade value for value
After strong resultsCompany doing well
With outside offerLeverage (use carefully)
Before budget finalisationMoney still available

Worst Times to Ask

TimingWhy to Avoid
During layoffs/redundanciesCompany in cost-cutting mode
Right after poor performanceNo leverage
When manager is stressedBad timing
Immediately after others’ raisesSeems reactive
During company crisisTone deaf
Monday morning/Friday afternoonDistracted timing

How to Ask: The Conversation

Setting Up the Meeting

Don’t ambush. Request a dedicated meeting:

“I’d like to schedule 30 minutes to discuss my compensation and career progression. When would work for you in the next week or two?”

Structure of the Conversation

PhaseWhat to Do
1. OpenThank them for meeting, state purpose clearly
2. EvidencePresent your achievements and value
3. Market dataShare what the role pays elsewhere
4. The askState specific number confidently
5. ListenLet them respond without interrupting
6. DiscussHandle objections, negotiate
7. CloseAgree next steps, get timeline

Script: The Ask

Opening:

“Thank you for making time. I wanted to discuss my compensation. I’ve been in this role for [X time] and I’d like to review my salary based on my contributions and the current market.”

Evidence:

“Over the past year, I’ve [achievement 1], [achievement 2], and [achievement 3]. Specifically, [quantified result].”

Market data:

“I’ve researched the market, and similar roles in our industry are paying £X-Y. I’m currently at the lower end of that range.”

The ask:

“Based on my performance and the market data, I’d like to discuss an increase to £[specific number].”

Then stop talking. Let them respond.

Script: Handling Objections

“We don’t have the budget”

“I understand budget constraints. Can we discuss a timeline for when this might be possible? Or are there other forms of compensation we could explore?”

“You haven’t been here long enough”

“I appreciate the company’s typical timeline. Given my achievements — specifically [examples] — I believe my performance warrants an earlier review. What would I need to demonstrate to accelerate this?”

“We need to think about it”

“Of course. Can we schedule a follow-up in [two weeks] to continue the discussion?”

“Everyone’s in the same boat”

“I understand the broader situation. My request is based on my specific performance and market value. Could we discuss what it would take for an exception?”

“Your performance hasn’t warranted it”

“I’d appreciate specific feedback on where I need to improve. Can we set clear goals and revisit this in three months?”

What to Negotiate Beyond Salary

If base salary isn’t moving, consider:

BenefitValue
BonusOne-off or ongoing
Pension contributionTax-efficient extra pay
Holiday daysTime has value
Flexible workingWFH, compressed hours
Training/educationCompany-funded courses
Job titleHelps future earnings
Remote workSave commute costs
Car allowanceMonthly benefit
Private healthcare£500-1,500/year value
Review timelineEarlier next review

Calculating Non-Salary Benefits

BenefitApproximate Annual Value
Extra 5 days holiday~5% of salary
Private healthcare£500-1,500
1% extra pension~1% salary (tax-free)
Full WFH£2,000-5,000 (commute savings)
Training budgetFace value

After the Conversation

If You Get the Raise

ActionWhy
Thank your managerBuilds relationship
Get it in writingConfirm details
Ask about next stepsWhen does it start?
Track new salaryFor future negotiations
Don’t tell colleaguesCauses issues

If You’re Told No

ResponseWhat to Ask
Ask for feedback“What would I need to improve?”
Ask for timeline“When can we revisit this?”
Ask for alternatives“Are there non-salary options?”
Set clear goals“What does success look like?”
Thank themStay professional

If No Is Really No

SignWhat It Means
“Not now, not ever”Time to look elsewhere
No path to promotionLimited growth
Below market with no fixBeing taken advantage of
Excuses but no planEmpty promises

Reality: Sometimes the only way to get market rate is to change jobs. Workers who switch jobs typically see 10-20% increases versus 3-5% staying put.

Special Situations

Negotiating a Starting Salary

TimingApproach
After offer, before accepting“I’m excited about the role. Is there flexibility on the salary?”
They ask your expectationGive a range (higher end first)
They make first offerAlways negotiate — first offers have room

Never lie about current salary — it can be grounds for dismissal if discovered.

Counter-Offers When You Have Another Job

DoDon’t
Be honest you have an offerBluff about imaginary offers
Give them fair time to respondSet unreasonable deadlines
Consider total packageFocus only on money
Be prepared to leaveThreaten without following through

Warning: Counter-offers are risky. Statistics show many who accept counter-offers leave within 12 months anyway — trust may be damaged.

If You’re Already Underpaid

ApproachScript
Acknowledge gap“I’ve realised my salary is significantly below market”
Present data“The going rate is £X-Y, I’m at £Z”
Stay professional“I’d like to discuss a correction”
Be patientLarge jumps may take 2 steps

Common Mistakes

MistakeWhy It Fails
No evidenceOpinions vs facts
UltimatumsDamages relationship
Comparing to colleaguesCreates HR issues
Emotional appeals“I need more” isn’t compelling
Bad timingMessage lost
Not having a numberSeems unprepared
Asking too oftenBecomes annoying
Accepting verbal promisesGet it in writing

Negotiation Checklist

Before the Meeting

Task
Researched market rate
Documented achievements
Quantified impact where possible
Prepared specific salary number
Scheduled dedicated meeting
Checked company/manager timing
Practised key points

During the Meeting

Task
State purpose clearly
Present evidence
Make specific ask
Listen to response
Handle objections calmly
Discuss alternatives if needed
Agree next steps

After the Meeting

Task
Send thank you email
Confirm agreement in writing
Note timeline for follow-up
Track for next negotiation

Sources

  1. MoneyHelper — Everyday money