HR Told Me to Be Grateful for a Salary That No Longer Covers Rent—This Is “Stability” Now

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2 days ago
HR Told Me to Be Grateful for a Salary That No Longer Covers Rent—This Is “Stability” Now

One of our readers shared a story that captures what full-time work may look like for many people right now. After years of doing everything “right” — holding a steady job, meeting expectations, and working harder each year — they found themselves falling further behind as living costs kept rising.

What happened when they finally spoke up about it says a lot about how “stability” is defined in today’s workplace.

The letter:

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Hi, dear Bright Side team!

I’ve worked full-time for years. Not a side hustle. Not “entry-level.” A real job with responsibilities, deadlines, and expectations. The kind of job that used to mean you could at least afford a roof over your head.

This year, my rent went up again. Not by a little. By enough that my paycheck now disappears the moment it hits my account. After rent, there are groceries if I’m careful. Utilities if nothing unexpected happens. Savings are a joke.

So I finally did what everyone says you’re supposed to do: I talked to my manager.

I didn’t ask for anything dramatic. I showed numbers. Rent increases. Inflation. My unchanged salary. I explained that I was working the same hours, doing more work, and falling further behind.

He listened. Nodded. Then said, “I understand, but you should be grateful you have a stable job. A lot of people would love your salary.”

That sentence landed like a slap.

Grateful. For what, exactly? For working full-time and still doing mental math at the grocery store? For choosing between gas and a doctor’s appointment? For lying awake at night wondering how one emergency could wipe me out?

A week later, HR sent an email about “financial wellness” and budgeting tips. Another email followed about a team lunch to “boost morale.” No raises. No adjustments. Just reminders to be positive.

The most painful part isn’t the money. It’s the message. That survival is supposed to feel like success. That struggling quietly is the price of being “employed.” That wanting to live — not thrive, just live — is asking too much.

I am grateful I work hard.
I’m just done pretending that gratitude pays rent.

Sincerely

M.

Thank you to our reader for trusting us with such a personal and honest story. Experiences like this remind us how many people are quietly carrying the same weight.

What do you think — have you ever been told to be “grateful” while struggling to make ends meet? Share your thoughts and stories in the comments.

The global situation

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Move to a smaller apartment, sounds like you are living beyond your means. Get another job if you don't want to move. You have plenty of choices.

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next time you ask for a raise leave your budget out of it and focus on the added workload, your long-term commitment and experience, focus on your job and stay focused. also never give up looking for a job. keep your resume up to date. start looking now. your manager will bever give you a raise. when you leave if there is no required 2 week notice then dont give it.

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So, people keep talking about how COVID created "years of employee-friendly conditions", and as far as I can tell, that's a crock. If workers were at an advantage from early 2020 until early 2025, more people should have at the very least been making enough money that a year of employer-friendly conditions didn't push them into an inability to cover rent, utilities AND groceries consistently.

Food bank use of higher than it's ever been in the US, Canada and the UK. More people than ever before are finding themselves unable to consistently cover basic monthly expenses, let alone put anything aside for savings. This *isn't normal* after a single year of the employment landscape swinging back to favour employers.

Stop lying to us. The situation has been worsening for workers consistently for decades, and that's only gotten worse in recent years. Employee protections have been stripped away, unions have lost both negotiating power with employers and any real connection to the average member; it's a bloody mess.

The people with the money and power want to keep people so close to the edge of financial collapse that we don't even have the energy to realize that a renewal of the labour movement is desperately needed - let alone do anything about it.

A year's worth of change shouldn't threaten to push so many full-time workers into homelessness. Not if conditions were so favourable to workers for years beforehand. Since it's obviously true that more people are more financially pinched despite working full-time than ever before, clearly conditions in the recent past haven't actually favoured workers as much as the media would have us believe.

It's like Trump telling people the cost of living is lower than it was a year ago when people can damn well tell it's rising. It's not just the lies; it's the fact that those lies insult our basic intelligence.

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Every year I feel like we’re getting to a more complicated level of this game called «life »

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Time to find another job. Part if not full time. Perfectly understand living paycheck to paycheck.

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Best way to get more money is get into side Hustle, also have a recent insurance plan from reliable insurance service provider for medicals and automobile

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No, americans should not have to do that, not when we win the billionaire race and the poor people race at the same time!!! There is enough money to pay people a living wage ... BILLIONNAIRES SHIULD NOT EXIST!!!

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Welcome to hell named as "Current Bad Economic Bad World". Yes, we are more or less same boat with you. Also, even if I'm boss and giving salary, it's so heavy lately. Less sales, can't raise price, even at worst time paying from my own personal wealth. My own family and friend work at me, so I just open at them all the transaction and booking. One of them says "maybe we should seek another workplace " I sigh and says "then it's time to close this place" yes, I work for several people to supress the cost yet still struggling a lot. Btw, some of them really leaving so, the struggle get heavier for me and who stay. If anything it's a bit relief of their salary, and I raise a bit of their salary.

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Note, 2 person leaving. 1 get new job but I'm not sure the detail. After few months one want to goes back, but I say her salary and work already divided to the workers who stay, and don't have plan to accept new worker (because I can't pay new workers either) I'd rather pay raise and preserve the current leftover worker.

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Yeah it's not fair that things cost a lot more but we don't get paid more.

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As year-end reviews roll around, many employees are walking into those meetings hoping for more than feedback on last year’s performance. They’re looking for bonuses, raises, or promotions in 2026. New research suggests many of them may leave disappointed — unless they work in a high-demand field.

After several years of employee-friendly conditions, bonuses have been shrinking since 2021. With hiring slowing and fewer people quitting, workers are holding onto their jobs more tightly. That has made it easier for employers to retain staff without offering generous bonuses — or any bonus at all.

New data from payroll provider ADP highlights the trend. After analyzing payroll records for 12 million workers at companies with at least 50 employees, ADP found that fewer than 40% received a bonus in December 2024. That’s down from 44% in 2021. Bonuses, which tend to go to senior and higher-paid employees, are still most common in industries like construction and manufacturing that rely on contract-based work.

Not only are bonuses reaching fewer people — they’re also getting smaller. The median bonus payout dropped 4% from the year before, landing at $1,786 in December 2024. According to ADP, employers are steadily returning to pre-2020 compensation patterns.

Raises aren’t looking much better. A recent survey from consulting firm Mercer shows that most employers plan to keep salary increases flat in 2026. On average, merit raises are expected to remain around 3.2%, with total increases — including promotions and cost-of-living adjustments — holding at about 3.5%, the same as in 2025.

Employers cite economic uncertainty and a cooling labor market as reasons for restraint. When there are more unemployed workers than open jobs, companies don’t feel pressure to raise pay to attract or keep talent. Promotions are also expected to slow, with only 9% of employees projected to receive one in 2026, down from 10% in 2025.

That’s the overall picture — but some fields are bucking the trend.

Artificial Intelligence

Investment in artificial intelligence is exploding, with global spending projected to reach $1.5 trillion in 2025, according to Gartner. As a result, companies are competing aggressively for AI talent.

AI engineers now earn a median salary of $184,000, according to Payscale. Wages for roles like DevOps engineers and senior network engineers rose 12% and 10% respectively in 2025, reaching about $131,000. While these increases are notable, they’re still lower than last year’s fastest-growing salaries, which rose by as much as 30%.

The ripple effects of AI extend beyond tech.

Bonuses in the information sector are also significantly higher than average, accounting for nearly 7% of total pay — almost double the national average. At the very top, companies continue to spend aggressively to secure elite AI talent.

What do you think about today’s pay and bonus trends? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

I Refuse to Earn $20K Less Than the Colleague I Trained

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Blood, Sweat and Tears while the billionaires get richer! I didn't vote for this!

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Here's my dilemma. I'm a widower living with my grandson. I lost my job because of the government shutdown, but I was not brought back since they determined suddenly that it was a "surplus slot". After waiting for two months I was hired in a contract position, but let go less than a week later and I still haven't been told why. Meanwhile I wasn't able to give my grandkids anything for Christmas at all. Can't pay bills, can't buy food. And, of course, turning 65 in a couple weeks there isn't a really big market out there for a job.

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