TLDR: Chefs are often underpaid because they avoid awkward money talks. This script changes that.
Introduction
If you’re a chef, you’ve probably accepted a role without fully discussing pay. Maybe you thought you’d prove yourself first. Maybe you didn’t want to seem difficult. Either way, you’re leaving money on the table. Here’s how to ask for what you’re worth and get it.
Table of Contents
1. Why Chefs Struggle With Salary Talks
Hospitality doesn’t teach negotiation. Kitchens are fast. You’re expected to be grateful. And the people hiring you? Often just as uncomfortable talking money.
But avoiding the talk doesn’t avoid the outcome. You still get paid something. You’re just not steering the outcome.
2. The Actual Script (And Why It Works)
Here’s the foundation:
“Thanks for the offer. Before I accept, I’d like to confirm that the rate reflects my experience and the scope of the role. I’ve worked similar sites at £19/hour and based on that, I’d be looking for £20. Is that something we can agree on?”
This does 3 things:
- Acknowledges the offer
- Signals research
- Leaves room for movement without sounding rigid
Bracketed Clarity:
(Example: Worked at a London hotel in a similar senior CDP role at £19/hour. Their current offer is £18.)
3. Before-and-After Scenarios: How Chefs Blow It
Bad version:
“I’m happy with whatever you think is fair.”
Strong version:
“Here’s the rate I’ve worked at in similar kitchens and the level of responsibility you’ve described. I’d like to be paid accordingly.”
4. What Employers Are Thinking
Hiring managers are not offended by negotiation. In fact, many expect it. What they don’t want is:
- Uncertainty
- Ego
- Endless back and forth
Most are working within budget ranges. A confident, data-backed ask helps them say yes.
Insider tip: We rank employers on our platform. If they underpay or ghost candidates, it doesn’t stay secret.
5. Red Flags to Watch For
- “We’re like a family here”: Unpaid overtime
- “Let’s see how you do”: No pay rise ever comes
- “We’ll review in 3 months”: Vague deferral tactic
6. Dirty Realities: Ghosting, Undercutting & False Promises
What if they agree… then go silent?
You’re allowed to follow up. Try:
“Just checking in. Should I still hold the dates or explore other offers?”
Or if they offer lower than agreed:
“I’d need the original rate we discussed to confirm. Otherwise I’ll have to step away.”
7. The Negotiation Scorecard
- What’s my lowest acceptable rate?
- Do I know what others get in this role and region?
- Have I kept the tone factual and professional?
- Am I willing to walk away if it doesn’t match?
- Have I checked employer reviews on this site?
Conclusion
Salary negotiation for chefs in the UK isn’t about confrontation, it’s about clarity. This script helps you move from awkward to assertive.
Use it to stop settling. Say what you’re worth. And get paid properly.
Explore chef roles with transparent rates, ranked employers, and built-in negotiation tools only on our platform. Browse jobs now.
What’s the best way for chefs to negotiate salary confidently?
Use a direct script with a clear ask and backup. (E.g. “Based on my experience and current market rates, I’m looking for £20/hour. Is that within your range?”) Confidence and clarity often lead to better offers.
Should chefs ask about pay before the trial shift?
Yes—always. (If you don’t confirm pay, you risk working for free or below your rate. Confirm expectations in writing before stepping into the kitchen.)
Can I see what other employers pay before applying?
Yes—The Chef Network ranks employers by pay transparency and chef feedback, so you can benchmark offers and avoid time-wasters.
