Also, how long do you take a holiday/vacation for?

  • Gabadabs@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    3 hours ago

    USA. I accumulate an hour of PTO for every 40 hours I work, up to a maximum of 40 hours a year. I have to use it pretty sparingly.

  • hardcoreufo@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    USA. 3 weeks vacation max out at 4, 1 week sick time, 1 week “personal time”. 10 holidays but we are running 24/7 so if you are scheduled to work you get time and a half those days plus 8 hours of extra pay. You get paid out any sick/personal time you don’t use but vacation days no longer roll over. I liked saving up 2 years of vacation and fucking off for two months.

  • rabber@lemmy.ca
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    4 hours ago

    Canada, 6 weeks plus 1-2 weeks during xmas closure plus unlimited sick days

  • lapping6596@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    USA, tech start-up. “unlimited PTO” and probably about a month’s worth per year. Also full WFH but that’s because of a medical exemption.

    While I’m at my desk, I work extremely hard but don’t usually work more than 35ish hours per week as I my brain can’t sustain much more.

  • insaneinthemembrane@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    Ireland… 25 days PTO which is standard, minimum is 20 days. Plus public holidays, around 9 or so.

    7 days sick leave at full pay, minimum is 5 days paid by gov at standard rate so not matched to your wages.

    Usually take a week off on holiday, a few days in a row for school breaks, otherwise random days here and there for stuff.

  • djmikeale@lemm.ee
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    16 hours ago

    Denmark: 30 paid days off per year, paid sick leave, some unknown amount of public holidays. Really enjoying this socialist-democratic hellhole.

  • hubobes@sh.itjust.works
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    14 hours ago

    Switzerland, 35 days of vacation but that is just the company I work for, usually it is 20-25 days. Also an additional 7 days of national and communal holidays.

    I usually go on short vacations, 3-7 days.

    • Kazumara@discuss.tchncs.de
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      12 hours ago

      Also Switzerland here, adding some more info:

      The minimum by law is 20 days in general, 25 days for people under 20 years of age. But getting 25 days independent of age is pretty standard at least for office jobs. At my workplace I get 25, people over 50 years of age get 5 days extra.

      Also by law two weeks of vacation are to be taken en bloc., so technically that’s not allowed hubobes ;-) but I have not yet heard of any enforcement of this for smaller places. I have a friend who works for a bank, they are apparently very strict in forcing their employees to take two weeks en bloc each year.

      Some collective employment agreements for industrial sectors mandate 25 days and mandate an increase for people over 50, but I don’t know for which sectors.

      Ah and as for sick days, by law 3 weeks in your first year, and longer later. There are a few scales for the exact increase over time, but just as an example the one from Basel is 2 months starting in your second year, 3 months starting year 4, 4 months starting year 11.

      Unless your contract has an insurance for sickness, which work a little differently, there it’s like 80% of your salary for 720 days within 900 days. With various little details, like nothing for the first 3 days, or burden of proof from day x, or sometimes 100% instead of 80%. Depends on the insurance, but it has to be good enough to be considered equal to the above mentioned minima by law.

  • aim_at_me@lemmy.nz
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    15 hours ago

    20 discretionary, 12 set public, unlimited negotiable, 10 sick days. New Zealand.

  • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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    4 hours ago

    Canada. Union. IT. Mixed Gov/corp contract.

    100% WFH (anywhere, but within the country if you’re on the gov stuff)

    22 holiday-days a year. But given the 9x9 fortnight means an extra day off within the paycheque, timed around stats it means 7 weeks.

    Generous supplemental medical and dental and vision plan, workday ends precisely at 4:39 and no one expects you to stay a millisecond after; but we stay to either finish or mothball a task so it’s an easier pickup. Evenings and holidays are fucking sacred and you won’t get contacted unless it’s a break-glass all-hands event.

    The job is too much fucking Ansible and not enough real work, but I joined because I know the staff and it’s a really great and cohesive team. New openings only when someone retires, and with luck I could end up sailing the world on half pay for life like the guy whose seat I took over.

  • daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    Spain:

    12 national holidays.

    29 vacation days.

    4 sick days without a doctor signed medical leave. As many as I need with a medical leave.

  • whotookkarl@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Midwest US at a large nonprofit with ~10% union workers, ~7 hours PTO accrued per 2 week pay period adds up to just over 184 hours or 23 days, and another 14 holidays. PTO accrued was tiny until 5 years seniority, currently at 13 years and I think it caps at 8@20.

    I usually take off as much as I can, about a month per year spread out by 1-2 week stretches for a vacation or just to take care of personal work or projects, moves, family stuff, etc.