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by Symbiote
3749 days ago
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In Europe, a month is typical for junior, professional jobs, with this increasing to three months for senior positions. You can, of course, not turn up to work. But that might well make you "unreliable" if you ask for a reference later. But it's not a problem, since a new employer giving a three month notice period will expect you to be on one at present. (The notice period during the first 6 or 12 months is often less, eg 2-4 weeks.) |
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E.g. in Norway it is near impossible to give less than 3 months notice for permanent positions without providing additional compensation, no matter how junior the position, except for a typically 6 month trial period.
Before I'd moved to the UK, I'd never even seen an employment contract with less than 3 months.
In practice, shorter notice is often mutually agreed on with or without compensation when both sides agree it suits them, but it's very common to serve out the full 3 months.