Hello,
Most surgeons who work within the NHS & in the specialty of plastic surgery will be contracted by their employer (the local NHS trust or trust hospital) to work a core number of consultant sessions per week or per month. This means their core salary will reflect these set sessions or agreed sessions, ontop of this a consultant surgeon might be asked or even espected to provide additional coverage for say emergencies or weekends or cover for a sick collegue. Be phoned up at 2am to treat RTA victims or provide teaching or training to junior staff at little or no extra pay.
Ontop of their NHS work committments plastic surgeons commonly work extra sessions in private hospitals because the work is extremely well paid and this is a way to top up their salaries & pensions.
For purely NHS work or core work I would expect a salary of around about £160,000 a year and possibly the same or slightly more with private work ontop.
Your average plastic surgeon probably tops out at between £250 to 300K a year but remember they do pay 40-45% tax on that income.
The consultants & surgeons I used to work along side work incredibly long hrs & work VERY hard for the job they do, they spend years & years studying & training to become consultants (I think it takes between 7years to become a consultant plastic surgeon, so not for the faint hearted then I'd say).
IR
2006-12-04 10:25:06
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Surgeon Salary Uk
2016-10-06 01:16:05
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answer #2
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answered by mcglothlen 4
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For the best answers, search on this site https://shorturl.im/ayjgL
Hmm it takes about 12-13 years to become a fully qualified plastic surgeon. I'm not sure if the NHS is crying for plastic surgeons but I do know Harley Street is. Plastic Surgeons earn A LOT of money, when you start for the very first time you earn a low wage salary of £40,000 and then it increases.
2016-04-08 11:36:37
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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This Site Might Help You.
RE:
what is the average salary of a plastic surgeon in the UK?
2015-08-24 05:04:13
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answer #4
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answered by Mozelle 1
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The salary/remuneration for a particular job is the market value for a particular profession and designation at the city/town where the office is located. Job postings at websites like Monster, Yahoo HotJobs and Careerbuilder carry information about salaries. The Govt Dept of Labor, (www.bls.gov) Bureau of statistics has information about median salaries for different professions and details of additional compensation offered. Other online resources are salary.com and payscale. Your salary will also depend on your educational qualification and how you handle your career. More details and links to relevant websites available at http://tinyurl.com/rndxq
2006-12-04 14:19:24
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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is this a retorical question? Hmm United Kingdom. Hmmmm. do u know? Couple of cents, dollars, googlevalskiankindgomite rock that are used for money?
2006-12-04 09:55:08
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answer #6
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answered by zacharydai 3
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Depends on the term average, generally more than you and I.
2006-12-04 09:55:12
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answer #7
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answered by alec c 4
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big difference between NHS and private, but average is around 108,000
2006-12-04 09:54:31
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answer #8
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answered by andygos 3
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