Our employer recently announced an upcoming company retreat at a resort about 1/2 hour from our office (1.5 hours from my home, though in the same town where about 1/3 of my colleagues live). it's a 2-day deal, with an 8AM "team breakfast" kicking off the second day.
They told us they got "group discount rates" for those of us who "chose to stay overnight". It's been admitted by senior management that I'm underpaid, which means my budget is tight. However, I don't know that, with my medical issues, I can leave my house at 6AM, wait till 8 to eat breakfast, and be fine. I was considering staying overnight, but the base rate for the rooms appears to be between $300-500. I cannot swing that without significant financial hardship to my family.
Would it be out of line for me to ask my employer to pick up the tab for my hotel room? While I'm the one who "chose" (very limited local market) to take a job so far from my home, I feel like they're the ones requiring this retreat, I don't see the company hurting for money, and maybe they should pick up the tab. I do know that because I'm new in town and new to the industry, there are several of my coworkers who have communicated that they really resent that I was even hired in the first place. Luckily, I have some transferrable skills that are rare in this market, and that the company needs.
Would you talk to your boss or not?
Re: Employees pay for hotel stays on company retreat?
Married DH 7/30/11
CSC arrived 5/7/12
CHC arrived 6/2/14
GL.
Can't hurt to ask. If you're shy, maybe ask them for to pay for at least part of the bill. I don't think it's terribly unreasonable to think they should pay if this is a required trip.
Or, just take snacks in the car on the way to breakfast.
Is this on a weekend too?
Honestly I'm floored that they expect you to stay late and then return the next day for a retreat without picking up the hotel tab for all employees. Bad planning. If they couldn't manage the budget then they should just have a team builder type event that is one day only.
I honestly don't know if I'd ask to be comp'd. By "underpaid" are you making $50K or six figures? That would factor in to my decision (FYI, NOT asking you to share your salary!
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