Submitted by PassionPit101 t3_11ee4zb in boston
Hi all!
I'll be graduating from college this spring and relocating from central NY with my partner, and i'm hoping to find some advice on what salary I should aim for and whether I can negotiate that in this city. As of right now I hold three BA's (History, Classics, Media Production) and three years of relevant work experience from my four years in college and am hoping to eventually head into grad school once I have the financial means. But in the meantime Boston is the city that has the most work relevant to my discipline---I'm hoping to continue work in the museum or library space (museum educator? PR assistant? basically anything I could do in the industry with my degrees). I'm seeing some great positions but they're averaging about 50k before taxes, and I'm not sure that's totally livable based on the income tax of Boston (unless Forbes' income tax calculator is way off?). Seeing as rent can be up to 3k per month just for a one-bedroom I'm pretty nervous crunching these numbers--even if I get a cheaper place I know rent hikes are not at all unusual for Boston and even if it's cheap now, it might not be later. Is it unreasonable to try and negotiate a 70k-80k salary on the basis of my experience and cost of living/inflation, or would I be laughed out of the interview? Am I misunderstanding the living situation for Boston and 50k is actually livable on it's own? Is there a magic salary range where you can maximize your take-home income in comparison to taxes owed? It's my first postgrad job so it's difficult to have a frame of reference for what to expect. Would especially love insight from recent grads or other museum/library professionals in this regard!
EDIT: I mentioned Assistant Curator as an example job but I realize that's definitely a position with postgraduate credentials---most entry level positions I've found in museums are working in communications, access services or museum education)
EDIT 2: Some people are asking about cars and debt. My partner has a car right now but we both HATE driving, so we would be all too happy to ditch it. As for student debt, I'll have around $22k total, and all of it is federal. I would try for income-based repayment (assuming the forgiveness plan falls through in the Supreme Court---otherwise it'd be forgiven)
Pinwurm t1_jadhqpc wrote
$70K+ in the museum/library/non-profit space is a pretty tall order unless you're going to be managerial/director level. Check glassdoor and negotiate as best as you can.
I moved here almost a decade ago from Upstate NY and the sticker shock is very real. You might pay twice as much for half the space.
As well, I didn't understand what a 'housing crisis' actually looked like. You won't have time to 'think' about an apartment you just saw. You either submit an application same day or someone else will take it the next. Plus there may be broker fees.
$50K is not enough to live on your own. Any job that offers you that is taking advantage of your naivity. But it might get you in the door... Anyways, you will certainly need a roommate.
Even if you're earning $70K-$80K, I would still recommend living with a roommate because you'll have more disposable income and you'll be able to afford a better location and probably get more overall space. The reason people like living here is because Boston will be your backyard. If spend all your money on rent, it's harder to enjoy living here.
It's very normal to live with a roommate through one's 30s. You basically do so until you shack up with a significant other.
Other thing that's hard to do is ditching the car. If you ever want to try to live on your own, it's the way to go. Insurance rates are higher. Yearly excise tax exists. Street parking is limited, private parking is hundreds of dollars a month. Your money is better spent on Ubers instead of parking garages.