If you stay, there's a possibility they goes bitter and put revenge at you, not sure if you should stay or not.
I Refused to Take a Lower Salary Than a New Hire—I’m Not a Charity Case

Work isn’t just about what we do — it’s also about how we’re treated and what we learn along the way. Sometimes, one experience can completely change how we see our career and ourselves. Recently, a Bright Side reader wrote to us to share such a moment.
Here’s Paul’s letter:
Hi Bright Side,
After 12 years of hard work as a senior projects manager, I just found out I’m paid 20% less than a junior I hired and trained. When I confronted my boss, he smirked: “She bargained. You never dared. The market belongs to the bold.” I didn’t argue.
The next day, I went to the office very early in the morning and quietly handed in my resignation to HR, but not before doing one small thing — I’d transferred every major client contact I’d brought in over the years to my personal phone. They trusted me, not the company.
I had called each of them that evening, calm and polite, telling them I was moving to a new firm, one that actually valued competence, experience. I’d actually received an offer from that firm months ago, but out of loyalty to my company, I never accepted it. I thought I owed them more. Turns out, I was wrong.
In the morning, 3 of the company’s biggest clients had called my boss, informing him that they’ll follow me. When he realized what happened, he called me, furious. I just laughed and said, “You were right. The market belongs to the bold.” Then I hung up.
He ran to my office, pale and shaking, asking me if I’d reconsider my resignation. I just smiled and said, “I think it’s already late.”
Fifteen minutes later, HR called me in. They handed me a new contract. A 40% salary increase, a big bonus, and a promise that I’d be promoted to Head of Operations if I stayed. HR said the company had “reconsidered my value.”
I could tell they were nervous. Suddenly, I was important! I should have felt happy, but instead, I just felt tired. Why did it take me quitting for them to see what I was worth?
Now the new offer is sitting on my desk. The paper looks clean and expensive, but to me, it feels like guilt dressed as kindness. The new company I was planning to join isn’t huge, but the people there seem honest. They want me because they believe in my work, not because they’re scared of losing me.
So now I’m stuck between two choices: Stay where the money is, or go where the respect is. Should I take the raise and stay, or walk away and start fresh?
What would you do if you were in my place?
—Paul


I'd share the offer with the company you are changing to and ask if they can come closer or above. The offer your current job is offering is in relation to the clients they are loosing, that means that the place they are going to can afford the same. Either way I would move (though to who may change), you already told your clients that you would and why. If you don't it weakens your position with them.
Leave
You are either a sheep or a shepherd. Remember that saying, "YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT YOU GOT TIL IT'S GONE". Suddenly NOW your boss wants you? Move on or you will be second guessing yourself forever.
Thank you, Paul, for sending us your story and trusting Bright Side with such a powerful and honest experience. Your situation speaks to so many people who have faced similar choices in their careers. Here are 4 different pieces of advice that might help you — and anyone in the same position — see things from new perspectives.
Respect Isn’t a Bonus.
If a company only values you when you threaten to leave, it’s not respect — it’s damage control. Real appreciation shows up in fair pay, support, and recognition long before you resign. The raise may fix the money problem, but it can’t erase years of being undervalued.
You’ve already seen how they truly see you — as replaceable until proven otherwise. Sometimes, walking away is the only way to keep your self-respect intact.
The Power of Strategic Staying.
Before you walk out, remember that emotions can blur strategy. You now have power — use it wisely. If you decide to stay, do it not out of guilt, but because you can shape your position into what you deserve.
Negotiate every promise in writing and ask for measurable goals tied to your promotion. Sometimes, staying a little longer on your terms can open even bigger doors later.
The Practical Thinker’s Choice.
Big decisions deserve calm thinking, not emotional reactions. Compare both offers side by side: salary, benefits, stability, growth, and how each aligns with your goals for the next five years.
Remember, loyalty is admirable — but loyalty to yourself matters most. If the new company gives you room to grow and breathe, that’s real value. Choose the path that feels like progress, not repair.
Follow the Energy, Not the Ego.
You’ve already proven your worth — to them and to yourself. The question now isn’t about salary; it’s about peace of mind.
Ask yourself where you feel more inspired — in a place that only reacts out of fear, or in one that welcomed you with trust. The right job should lift your energy, not drain it. Go where you’re celebrated, not tolerated.
When the weight of life feels too much and hope seems out of reach, kindness has a gentle way of bringing light back in. 
Click to read 10 Stories That Prove Kindness Costs Nothing Yet Heals Everything.
Comments
The fact that your boss only saw your worth when his profits were on the line says everything about that company’s culture🥴 If I were you I’d walk away with my head high. You’ve already proven your value in the market and earned the trust of major clients. That’s power!

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