What’s your labour rate?

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Newbeeneil

Queen Bee
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Joined
Jan 1, 2018
Messages
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Location
Fernhurst Sussex
Hive Type
National
Number of Hives
40 plus 23 that I maintain for clients.
I spent yesterday sorting my 23-24 tax return and thought I would try to work out what my labour rate was based on my income versus expenditure and a guesstimate of the hours I work on my hobby.
Obviously my rate is not strictly based on honey sales as I also manage bees for clients but I was pleasantly surprised to find I could pay myself £12.50/h for my hobby 😊
 
I spent yesterday sorting my 23-24 tax return and thought I would try to work out what my labour rate was based on my income versus expenditure and a guesstimate of the hours I work on my hobby.
Obviously my rate is not strictly based on honey sales as I also manage bees for clients but I was pleasantly surprised to find I could pay myself £12.50/h for my hobby 😊
That is amazing, probably not typical
 
Getting a decent hourly rate is not just about covering your expenses but also being efficient and getting a lot done in an hour. I've kept tabs on income and expenditure and am only now in the black. I haven't kept a note of time spent. Having a lot of colonies forces you to get more out of time put in, but even so, I'm pleased that my retirement activity pays for itself. I doubt it will ever pay for me.
 
I spent yesterday sorting my 23-24 tax return and thought I would try to work out what my labour rate was based on my income versus expenditure and a guesstimate of the hours I work on my hobby.
Obviously my rate is not strictly based on honey sales as I also manage bees for clients but I was pleasantly surprised to find I could pay myself £12.50/h for my hobby 😊
£0.01 per hour...slave labour rates.
 
My wife likes my beekeeping ; its the only hobby Ive had that has ever turned a profit - all be it a small one.
My wife too is keen that I continue beekeeping: if I say that I'm popping up to the apiary for 10 minutes then it's usually at least an hour of peace she can enjoy.........
 
My wife likes my beekeeping ; its the only hobby Ive had that has ever turned a profit - all be it a small one.
In my first year of beekeeping, I worled out I would have to sell my honey for £48.50 a jar to break even!!
 
Yes 🤣
Reminded me of when I was working. There’s no such thing as a quick xray… even though I said it countless times.
Well I suppose you could argue the X-ray itself was very quick….
 
It seems that I work to pay the staff !!!!!!!!.
 
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It seems that I work to pay the staff !!!!!!!!.
This, I think most beefarmers are asset rich and cash poor, if I payed myself the value of my work in comparison to what I pay the staff then it would be totally unsustainable. Add to that the fact that the bulk of the valuable assets (the bees themselves) can drop dramatically to virtually worthless if the bees die off, then its a high risk game with uncertain financial rewards.
We probably all do it as a labour of love to a certain extent.
 
This, I think most beefarmers are asset rich and cash poor, if I payed myself the value of my work in comparison to what I pay the staff then it would be totally unsustainable. Add to that the fact that the bulk of the valuable assets (the bees themselves) can drop dramatically to virtually worthless if the bees die off, then its a high risk game with uncertain financial rewards.
We probably all do it as a labour of love to a certain extent.
Having owned and run a small business (35 staff £3.5m turnover) I think this is the reality of a lot of small businesses. The owner takes all the risk, is probably the last one to get paid when times are tough and the one who carries the can if anything goes wrong ... these are the businesses the HMRC and banks find are easy prey - owe them £50k and you have a problem - owe them £50m and they have the problem. I lived through three recessions in business, survived two and lost in the last one, the 2008 banking crash. The one thing any small business owner needs is a crystal ball and the ability to use it to predict the future !
 
In my first year of beekeeping, I worled out I would have to sell my honey for £48.50 a jar to break even!!
Doesn't it depend on why one keeps bees? Subsistence/hobby BKs like myself may not regard the income as important: I bear all my own costs and give my honey and wax away - recipients usually return emptied jars and replacement lids are not expensive, a local churchwarden appreciates the wax for the huge, old oak west doors. We gave a 1lb jar to a dentist, who gives generously of her skills etc and doesn't always charge! Her genuine appreciation of our simple gift meant a lot to us.
A BK with more hives must work on a commercial basis: labour is only one cost and must depend on how "efficiently" work is done. Moobee's estimate suggests a consciousness of how expertise and speed evolve with experience!
 

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