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-   -   Joining Ryanair (https://www.pprune.org/terms-endearment/597527-joining-ryanair.html)

UAV689 19th February 2018 22:01

stoneangel

Currently it is not uncommon to see cadets waiting 4 months sometimes more before they start line training and therefore before they start getting paid.

INKJET 20th February 2018 07:30

If you join as a cadet you’ll be into a service company which means that much of your living expenses can be deducted against income, so when you do start earning you’ll be paying little or no tax for some time to come, but be very careful to document everything that you spend and get receipts for everything. How long this will last going forward will likely depend on the country that you’ll be based in. In many countries this type of service company will not pass the test of false self employment, the real irony is that the revenue go after you not the employer, yet it is the employer who gets the real saving through not having to pay NI (national insurance contributions) which unlike the employee NI have no upper limit and are levied at around 13.2% in the UK, put into perspective that means a pilot earning a £100k over any period in a service company is allowing the true employer (if proved) to evade/avoid £13200 in NI contributions.

There is a similar example in the UK courts this week involving a BBC TV presenter who had a service company claiming she was self employed but the courts found in favour of HMRC that in reality she was employed by the BBC and they (HMRC) are chasing her for £400K in taxes, interest and penalties

Seek professional advice before you sign up to a limited company scheme as a service provider and secondly ask if you have any choice in the matter, ie is direct employment an option to self employed, if you are told it must be a self employed service provider then you have your answer, you aren’t really self employed because the ‘true’ employer is dictating the terms of your contract.......

Of course there are an increasing number of airlines playing this game to a greater or less degree, if you join Norwegian you wont be employed by them but by OSM who provide pilot services to the airline, the difference is that you are 100% an employee of OSM and pay tax and and NI the same as you would if you were employed by Norwegian directly, for most that means you can sleep at night not worrying about a dawn raid by the tax authorities

SMT Member 20th February 2018 07:52


Originally Posted by INKJET (Post 10058871)
If you join as a cadet you’ll be into a service company which means that much of your living expenses can be deducted against income, so when you do start earning you’ll be paying little or no tax for some time to come, but be very careful to document everything that you spend and get receipts for everything. How long this will last going forward will likely depend on the country that you’ll be based in.

In other words, in the UK Ryanair has the taxpayer subsidising it's pilot training program. Luckily I don't live there, which means:


Originally Posted by INKJET (Post 10058871)
In many countries this type of service company will not pass the test of false self employment


RAT 5 20th February 2018 09:01

One wonders about a question. Many of the guys who are falling foul of self-employed II35 investigations, and others who will be ruled against by HMRC, it seems were those who set these schemes up themselves, perhaps in a false belief. We are told that in RYR's case the schemes are set up by RYR and the pilot has no choice in the matter. Comply or no job. How would that make the pilot 100% culpable?

Airone2977 20th February 2018 09:18

100% guilty cause everything is written black on white on the "provision of service" MCGinley contract for the pilot.
Signed mean understand and comply, end of the story. Unless the pilot is able to prove that he's completely stupid and doesn't get what he's doing. Not very genuine for an airline pilot don't you think ?

Jwscud 20th February 2018 12:28

Quite some time ago, pilots on the “new” Brookfield contract (3-pilot ltd companies set up in Ireland) who were British citizens based in the UK were told HMRC required them to pay all tax and NI in the UK. Needless to say the HMRC expense rules are rather more stringent than the Irish.

One ended up paying both employees and employers NI contributions with 5% reduction in your taxable income to account for general expenses the only alleviation, unlike those under the Irish taxman who were paying themselves €800/month and taking the remainder in expenses.

Rated De 24th February 2018 22:29


Their short-sightedness is incredible - if they weren’t so hell bent on stitching up their current employees and gave them the bases they wanted then they wouldn’t even need to recruit DEC’s! 21st Jan 2018 23:05
Ryanair DAC, Dublin Office, Airside Business Park, Swords, Co. Dublin

or

Waterside Hammondsworth England, British Airways Fort Fumble

or

Coward Street Mascot NSW 2020, Qantas Airways Fort Fumble

The mantra by the these HR/IR dark art practicing types is the same:

Spare NO expense to save a penny.....................

Heard quietly as these Blattodea continued their manic pursuit of lower labour unit cost, was the ritual chant, no pilots means no labour cost, imagine the profits!

Perhaps Ryanair will get closer to their 'nirvana' than we ever imagined :E

Contact Approach 24th February 2018 22:57

Who in their right mind accepts these T&C's! Jesus, man!

Pilot-sam 1st May 2018 22:48

Could anyone share some details regarding the programme (OCC, SIM, Safety Pilot Sectors, Line Training Sectors etc.) when joining as a Type-rated DEFO? Many thanks!

FRogge 1st June 2018 14:28

Pretty sure they won't buy you a ticket. They will propably tell you that you already have the privilege of not paying for your assesment as the cadets have to do.

Flyingdoc93 19th June 2018 18:47

Starting Salary
 
Hi guys,
sorry if this is wrong place to post this and please redirect as required.

Could anyone give me a very approximate guess at the current Ryanair starting salary for cadets?

I understand that they have recently announced a bonded TR with only a small contribution from the cadet as well as salary sacrifice scheme for the length of the bond?

Does anyone know what the salary is and what the sacrifice is?! Doesn't seem to be mentioned anywhere.

Thanks,

am111 19th June 2018 23:51

1 Attachment(s)
This was passed on to me from a classmate of mine and not sure where he got it and how accurate it is. It looks official enough. I have seen the salary figures and other info independently repeated elsewhere on this forum, but of course you can't guarantee they're accurate either, but it looks about right.

gearlever 20th June 2018 14:26

German pilots to vote on strike action at Ryanair

https://www.irishtimes.com/business/...nair-1.3537523

giord 18th February 2019 10:55

Hi !

Thinking about joining Ryanair as DEC non type rated. Do they make You pay the type rating ? And if so, how much ?

Ryanairrecruitment 26th February 2019 13:26

no, it is a €15k paper bond, no payment for the type rating

giord 27th February 2019 06:43


Originally Posted by Ryanairrecruitment (Post 10400972)
no, it is a €15k paper bond, no payment for the type rating

Hi, thanks for the reply. Do You get money deducted monthly or something like that ?

Ryanairrecruitment 27th February 2019 08:02


Originally Posted by giord (Post 10401584)
Hi, thanks for the reply. Do You get money deducted monthly or something like that ?

No, there used to be a salary reduction, but not anymore.

giord 27th February 2019 17:24


Originally Posted by Ryanairrecruitment (Post 10401662)
No, there used to be a salary reduction, but not anymore.

Thank You very much for the highly valuable information. Just a last question to fully understand : is there a minimum time this bond is applicable for ? Meaning that should the pilot leave before a certain time he should pay back the 15k ? Thank You very much again.

trancada 28th February 2019 20:43

At moment the contracts are instead of need to register a company in Ireland?

RogueOne 28th February 2019 20:55

Is this the same for Non TR FO?

Is there any payment or salary reduction... or is it just a bond?


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