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-   -   Virgin Atlantic FO payscale (https://www.pprune.org/terms-endearment/597065-virgin-atlantic-fo-payscale.html)

NineInchSnail 15th Jul 2017 06:50

Virgin Atlantic FO payscale
 
Hey folks,

I know year 1 is 69K but what is the payscale for the first 6/7 years?

Thanks a lot in advance

fast cruiser 16th Jul 2017 14:22

Year 6 £64,285 + £15,996 flying pay
Year 7 £65,892 + £15,996 flying pay

Dave 23rd Jul 2017 17:39

so basically....

better than BA on a per flying hour basis :D

(VS - 750hr/yr, BA - 898/yr)

VJW 23rd Jul 2017 19:18

As a LTC at a loco making £120k gross- how many years would it take to get back to that salary in VS (or BA for that matter) not including the fact I know they both have far superior 'packages' including pension and other perks. Just wondering how long it'd take to have that much in the bank each month again and how long if at all would it take to break even bearing in mind I'm mid 30's??

Enzo999 23rd Jul 2017 19:30

In BA it will take you 19 years to get to that figure and that's assuming command at some point, if your a life long F/O then make it 34 (Short haul pay scales, long haul might knock a few years off that but you are unlikely to get a long haul command before 19 years anyway). Money is no longer the reason for joining BA or Virgin.

Job Knockey 23rd Jul 2017 19:58

If money isn't the reason for joining BA or VS, what is the reason?

Is it crippling fatigue and constant jet lag? That's why I left anyway, not to mention the aeons to command....

And how long will it take to get the money back if you leave a £120,000 job? Answer: you never will. It's not just lost wages, it's the lost investment compounding time for all those extra years of money. And that is potentially huge.

V1_cut 23rd Jul 2017 20:18

Does anyone know if Virgin will consider non type rated FOs onto any of their fleets in the near future?

Blinkz 23rd Jul 2017 20:51


Originally Posted by VJW (Post 9839875)
As a LTC at a loco making £120k gross- how many years would it take to get back to that salary in VS (or BA for that matter) not including the fact I know they both have far superior 'packages' including pension and other perks. Just wondering how long it'd take to have that much in the bank each month again and how long if at all would it take to break even bearing in mind I'm mid 30's??

in VS probably around 15 years, depending on how long it takes to get command (we've a retirement bubble approaching so current time scales will be dropping)

As has been said if you are chasing money then a Loco captain/LTC will earn more money over a career. However there is lots to take into account. VS most likely has a better pension, but also (and of course this is very much personal preference) better lifestyle. I find the long haul lifestyle a lot more pleasant then short haul loco's. But I don't have a major issue with jet lag and find the roster much more lifestyle friendly! We have at least 10 days if not more off a month and yes we are way for 2/3 days but then are off for 2/3 days after. I have more time at home now, and more rested/enjoyable time then I ever did with short haul. I couldn't work in short haul for 30 years, it would kill me! I like having a few mini-holidays a month with days off inbetween then working 5/6 days in a row with long hours and only a few days off to recover before starting again.

Jack the rabbit 24th Jul 2017 13:39


Originally Posted by Job Knockey (Post 9839914)
If money isn't the reason for joining BA or VS, what is the reason?

Is it crippling fatigue and constant jet lag? That's why I left anyway, not to mention the aeons to command....

And how long will it take to get the money back if you leave a £120,000 job? Answer: you never will. It's not just lost wages, it's the lost investment compounding time for all those extra years of money. And that is potentially huge.

Which one of the two did you work for Job Knockey?

Job Knockey 24th Jul 2017 20:11

I have never worked at British Airways.

Ronand 31st Jul 2017 09:49

I'm in the same boat, lowcost Capt made 135k eur everything included last year, but but really fed up with the lowcost job and lifestyle. I thought about applying to virgin, would it make sense being 31 years old and joining as FO? Is the lifestyle really that much better to take this big pay cut? Any Advice?

eckhard 31st Jul 2017 14:56

Not related to VS but 20 years ago, I was a Training Captain on B737 for a U.K. Charter airline. Joined BA as a 747FO, aged 42. 14 years to LHS Airbus. 19 years to LHS 787. (Could have got LGW SH command much earlier.)

OK, the initial pay cut was very painful but I have no regrets at all. IIRC, my basic went from £53K to £30K. Now it's £156K, but as others have said, it's not all about the money. My life-style improved no-end, the family loved the staff-travel perks and I generally felt that I had more time at home and felt better when I was there.

Difficult to give advice based on my experience as the world has moved on and who knows what the next 20 years will look like? Anyway, it worked for me and good luck to you, whatever you decide.

Snapper5 31st Jul 2017 15:13

I'm very interested in Virgin !
Only thing that bothers me is what the future will be like without Branson?
Do guys and gals natter about it in the crew room etc..

Cheers

prisoner24601 1st Aug 2017 14:12

Whether your interested or not. It depends whether they want you. I've been applying for years.

Tricia Takanawa 27th Aug 2017 22:00

How many years do the increments continue for at VS?
And are the capt pay scales from PPJN accurate? Is yr 1 capt £113k +15k flight pay or £113 total?
Cheers!

Nil further 28th Aug 2017 10:54

deleted at request of Enzo999

Enzo999 28th Aug 2017 13:40


Originally Posted by Nil further (Post 9875124)
A bog standard 15 yr CPT at easyjet will have a P60 of somewhere around £130k if no employee pension contribution.

I paid 21% of my salary last year (company goes 7%) my P60 shows £116k

Very pleased for you, but not exactly what was asked.

Snapper5 4th Sep 2017 10:39

Any Virgin employees willing to give an honest opinion of the job ?
Is it all as good as it seems ?

FACoff 4th Sep 2017 11:29


Originally Posted by fast cruiser (Post 9832526)
Year 6 £64,285 + £15,996 flying pay
Year 7 £65,892 + £15,996 flying pay

So just to clarify the payscale then. Does the year 1 figure of 69K include flight pay?

StopStart 4th Sep 2017 11:53

Year One FO pay is £71162, consisting of £55166 basic and £15996 flying pay.
Year 2 - £74240
Year 3 - £75699
Year 4 - £77182
Year 5 - £78712
Year 6 - £80281
Flying Pay remains fixed at £15996 every year.

Honest opinion of the place? I like it and consider myself lucky to be here. I fly with good people on decent routes in good aircraft. We are well remunerated and our pension is the best in the industry. Time to command is fair for a seniority-based airline.
There are mumbles and moans as in any airline but on balance it's a good place to work. You will obviously get varying opinions but that's mine.
:ok:

Snapper5 4th Sep 2017 11:57

Thanks for the reply

I'm 25 and a captain, thinking what to do and if it's worth the 40k drop in pay

StopStart 4th Sep 2017 12:46

Only you can answer that question.

I'm not going to try and convince anyone to join Virgin. Judging by the number of applicants, the job sells itself. You've got 40 years of short haul command ahead of you - do you take the hit and get on a long haul seniority list now or leave it 10 years until the pay drop is even bigger and you're even further down the list?
By the way, a large proportion of us are ex-skippers from elsewhere.

Snapper5 4th Sep 2017 16:43

I heard a rumour that new joiners won't get the high pension contributions?

prisoner24601 4th Sep 2017 16:48


Originally Posted by StopStart (Post 9882095)
Only you can answer that question.

I'm not going to try and convince anyone to join Virgin. Judging by the number of applicants, the job sells itself. You've got 40 years of short haul command ahead of you - do you take the hit and get on a long haul seniority list now or leave it 10 years until the pay drop is even bigger and you're even further down the list?
By the way, a large proportion of us are ex-skippers from elsewhere.

I've been applying since I had 2500hrs total in 2011 - not had an interview at al. B737, B777. I don't think its a matter of what Virgin can offer you but what you can offer Virgin!

Enzo999 4th Sep 2017 20:07


Originally Posted by StopStart (Post 9882036)
Year One FO pay is £71162, consisting of £55166 basic and £15996 flying pay.
Year 2 - £74240
Year 3 - £75699
Year 4 - £77182
Year 5 - £78712
Year 6 - £80281
Flying Pay remains fixed at £15996 every year.

Honest opinion of the place? I like it and consider myself lucky to be here. I fly with good people on decent routes in good aircraft. We are well remunerated and our pension is the best in the industry. Time to command is fair for a seniority-based airline.
There are mumbles and moans as in any airline but on balance it's a good place to work. You will obviously get varying opinions but that's mine.
:ok:

Is the pension payable on your total pay or just the basic?

Tricia Takanawa 4th Sep 2017 20:14

15% of the total (71k yr 1).

Shame BA can't learn a thing or two. (12% of 95% of basic salary,... Yes I'm still confused by that one. Luckily based on 24 point scale)

Enzo999 4th Sep 2017 21:12

Yeah the pension at Virgin kicks the :mad: out of the BA one.

cloudn9ne 5th Sep 2017 08:19

To add a bit of balance from a BA perspective there are certainly a few advantages over virgin.
1) You can fly both long haul and short haul in BA which gives you all career options. Be based at either lhr or lgw to suit your commute and fly any one of 320,380 soon to be 350, 747, 777 or 787.
2) When you get your command you slide onto your same pay point on the captains scale be it 3,7 or 20 years. In Virgin I believe when you get your command, you start on captains pay point 1 irrespective of how long you've been in the company.
3) The top pay points in BA are noticeably more money than virgin.
4) You really are a master of your own destiny in BA, you can become a training FO, senior Manager, or whatever else suits your fancy based on merit and irrespective of your time in the company. Again I'm led to believe as an FO in virgin your career options outside of line flying are very very limited.
5) seniority......now this goes two ways. Of course to start with you deal with all the crap but you know that as your career progresses you are gaining more and more control over your life. You are working towards something. In virgin with rotating seniority you could have been in the company 10, 20 years, you've done your time and you know at certain points you can't even be sure your going to get the leave you want for that wedding or family holiday but the guy that joined yesterday can.
6) Roster manipulation, Bid for what you want when you want it. You can swap as many trips as you want without getting the company involved, swap leave, bid for days off, destinations etc etc currently called bid line . This will change with the new system but we are aiming for the same flexibility with the new JSS system. Again when your new your control of your bidding is very limited but we are looking at this over ones whole career.

As a 12 year 777 FO im currently 14,15 days off per month on average, this is more than my virgin friend on 340 who seems to get closer to 11,12. Last year new joiners were getting commands on shorthaul after only 18 months in the company. The normal is closer to 5-7 years. Long haul is of course much much longer but if we are comparing to the LOCOS this would be comparing apples and pears. I contribute 6% of my salary and BA 12.6% (18.6% total) into my pension. Even if you are on the new 34 point payscale, your pensionable pay follows the 24 points and is therefore no different to mine. We have 28 days leave and about 16 wrap days per year and another 14 days off called a duty free week. This is a total of 58 possible leave days which again I believe is more than Virgin.

I left a LOCO 12 years ago at the age of 24 and have been long haul ever since, I Don't have any regrets. I have almost complete control over my lifestyle from month to month. I choose roughly how many days off I have, which days they are, where I go and when I take my leave. I can choose which aircraft I fly, if I want a shorthaul command or stay where I am dictating my lifestyle on long haul. If I become a training FO, a manager on the ground or if I want to go part time.

We all want different things from a 'career' but do you want to sit where you are, flying the same aircraft to the same destinations with the same people for 30-40 years or do you want options and the ability to have a say over all of those things? For me as a 20-30 year old deciding on what to do, it would be a very easy decision (BA or possibly virgin). As a 35+ year old with a family knowing I may never possibly get a long haul command it wouldn't be quite such an easy decision.

Snapper5 5th Sep 2017 09:09

BA has never appealed to me , I have not tried to get in and probably won't .
Have a few friends there who don't like it but they are on the 34 pay scale on both LH and SH , which is what new joiners will be on .
They also say that the movement now will be very slow after the mass movement last year .
I can understand if you are on the old system and relatively senior then it's probably good !

Does VS make a profit ? I guess brexit will
Only effect the cost of things in dollars ?
As the don't do European routes ?
Mr Cruz does not fill me with Confidence either !

Reversethrustset 5th Sep 2017 10:27

Is there not enough BA information on the BA thread? This thread surely is all about the pros and cons of Virgin (& the pay scale) not the pros and cons of BA.

Cloud Bunny 5th Sep 2017 14:29

Can I clarify how the year one figure converts into a monthly net figure, after tax, NI, pension etc?
Currently in the Middle East and a little out of touch with the tax system back home!

Tricia Takanawa 5th Sep 2017 15:27

Approx £3800 for 6% pension contributions. Allowances for down route on top.

Childcare vouchers, cycle to work, and non-standard tax coding will affect this a little.

Snapper5 5th Sep 2017 16:15

3800 ? Would of thought it would be more than that

Cloud Bunny 5th Sep 2017 16:31


Originally Posted by Tricia Takanawa (Post 9883087)
Approx £3800 for 6% pension contributions. Allowances for down route on top.

Childcare vouchers, cycle to work, and non-standard tax coding will affect this a little.

Hmmm...bugger. Thanks for the info! 👍🏼

JliderPilot 5th Sep 2017 17:07

Basic income tax calculator here:

Income tax calculator: Find out your take-home pay

Time Traveller 5th Sep 2017 17:14

I know from experience, E/W long haul flying with just 11-12 days off per month is unbelievably fatiguing in the long run. More so than typical SH rosters. I'm much happier in the latter.

StopStart 5th Sep 2017 19:18

As I said, I have no particular interest in convincing anyone to join Virgin over and above any other company.

Snapper5 - new joiners are on the same pension deal. Cadets are on different benefit structure during their cadetship period so only receive a max of 10% company contribution. They then revert to the 15% scheme.

Cloudbunny - this website is handy for calculating net pay. Remember we have allowances paid to us as well, on a trip by trip basis. As with all UK airlines the way these are paid and taxed is currently being reviewed by HMRC however at present we receive an additional USD600 - 1200 a month depending on destination & frequency. If you're hoping to maintain your salary standards from the Middle East you really need to be looking at UK DEC SH jobs. As you're well aware, there's a reason they pay a premium in the ME!

Cloudn9ne - thanks for the info on BA; I'm glad that you're happy with the choices you've made, as I am with mine. Just for completeness I'd respond:

1) Correct. Virgin is a longhaul airline. We have LHR, LGW and MAN bases. The MAN basing options suits a lot of people.
2) Also correct. When/if you get your command at VS you move to the level 1 captain pay. Which is obviously a pay rise on any FO pay. Again, we're a long haul only airline so there are no options for an early command on SH. If however you want a long haul command at BA you have something of a wait in store.
3) True story although how many senior skippers are on full time contracts? The higher salaries at BA on part-time of a 900hr contract aren't that far off those of a full time 750hr contract at VS. Don't get starstruck by the ££££ signs at the top of the scales - by the mid-fifties onwards most people are doing whatever they can to reduce the amount of work they have to do!
4) We have FO TRIs, groundschool instructors and managers. Like BA. If that sort of thing floats your boat....
5) That argument cuts both ways old chap. Our rotating bid groups make it all a lot fairer overall. That's how the the 7 month FO I've just been away with got his Christmas Leave bid for this year approved.
6) We have bidding options and swapping. True your system is currently much better, especially in terms of sector swapping and automated swaps. The ability to do that is a function of the size of BA. We're much smaller so things are a bit more mandraulic. I hope it works out for you and you don't lose that flexibility but ultimately JSS is just a preferencing system like Carmen. It's going to favour the company.
I'm a year 5 747 FO. I have 15 days off this month, had 17 days in Aug and 13+4 days leave in Jul.

The other thing I'd add (ribbingly) is if it's that good at BA why do we always get a slack handful of BA folk joining us each time we recruit?

Time Traveller - Long haul is indeed fatiguing; we're lucky in that we have a 750hr contract and various time-in-seat/min days off agreements to protect us. You're right though, LH isn't for everyone. By way of comparison, I found repeated days of SH multi-sector days to be more ruinous. We're all different.

Folks, I'm happy to answer questions about VS. I'm not going to try and sell it to you and won't do an in-depth "compare and contrast" against other U.K. airlines. FYI I'm a late 40s, ex-military, ex-UK loco SH, year 5 FO on the 744. Generally v happy with my lot in life currently.
Except that the bloody stepkids won't tidy their bedrooms.

Snapper5 5th Sep 2017 19:39

Stop start

Thankyou for the info ! Much appreciated!

Just a few questions

Are there any rumours floating around regarding Bransons share reduction ?

How does the union work at VS ? Is it a strong one ?

Cheers

Tricia Takanawa 5th Sep 2017 21:43

Is the time to the LHS still around 10 years as per PPJN?

Count von Altibar 5th Sep 2017 23:34

The union is strong at VS. Hang on is that the minority one or the majority one, I think it's the minority one? I have a few friends at VS and they don't paint the same picture as the chap above. They say it used to be good years ago but things have slipped quite a bit in recent years. I think without the Delta link things could potentially be a lot worse. It's hard to compare VS with BA they're very different entities in many ways not least in size and size matters in aviation.


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