Yusra3
VIP Contributor
The average American leaves over 200 hours of paid time off unused each year. If you want to negotiate more vacation, try these strategies:
Time the request strategically
Avoid asking during hectic periods like right before holidays or performance review season. After wrapping up a big project or company milestone can be opportune timing.
Prepare your case
Quantify the value you consistently contribute, and explain how you plan to complete priority work before time off. Highlight that you’ll return recharged.
Frame as a retention strategy
Note that more paid vacation will increase your loyalty and tenure with the company. The cost of increasing PTO is far less than replacing you.
Suggest a trial period
Propose a 6-month increased PTO trial after which both parties can evaluate if it met objectives before committing long-term. A pilot test often eases concerns.
Offer flexibility
Provide options like taking some vacation unpaid or using vacation days for sick time when needed. Willingness to compromise shows consideration of company needs.
Ask for gradual increments
If 5 extra days immediately seems unlikely, request just 1-2 additional days this year with the intent to gradually build as you demonstrate high performance with more time off.
Use peers as leverage
Mention coworkers who have negotiated PTO or industry data on comparable vacation policies to convince hiring manager increased vacation aligns with trends.
Pitch productivity benefits
Explain studies that show rested employees are more focused and productive at work. Shared benefit of you taking more time off.
If declined, get reasons in writing
This provides documentation to negotiate again in the future backed by their stated obstacles. Or reflects poorly on them if given unsatisfactory rationale.
The key is presenting added vacation time as a “win-win” benefit, not just a personal desire. With the right framing, you can gain those extra days off to enjoy.
Time the request strategically
Avoid asking during hectic periods like right before holidays or performance review season. After wrapping up a big project or company milestone can be opportune timing.
Prepare your case
Quantify the value you consistently contribute, and explain how you plan to complete priority work before time off. Highlight that you’ll return recharged.
Frame as a retention strategy
Note that more paid vacation will increase your loyalty and tenure with the company. The cost of increasing PTO is far less than replacing you.
Suggest a trial period
Propose a 6-month increased PTO trial after which both parties can evaluate if it met objectives before committing long-term. A pilot test often eases concerns.
Offer flexibility
Provide options like taking some vacation unpaid or using vacation days for sick time when needed. Willingness to compromise shows consideration of company needs.
Ask for gradual increments
If 5 extra days immediately seems unlikely, request just 1-2 additional days this year with the intent to gradually build as you demonstrate high performance with more time off.
Use peers as leverage
Mention coworkers who have negotiated PTO or industry data on comparable vacation policies to convince hiring manager increased vacation aligns with trends.
Pitch productivity benefits
Explain studies that show rested employees are more focused and productive at work. Shared benefit of you taking more time off.
If declined, get reasons in writing
This provides documentation to negotiate again in the future backed by their stated obstacles. Or reflects poorly on them if given unsatisfactory rationale.
The key is presenting added vacation time as a “win-win” benefit, not just a personal desire. With the right framing, you can gain those extra days off to enjoy.