@JW wrote:
I kind of suspect that most folks that are making $50 an hour or better are not counting their travel time and report time into the equation.
What about those shops you have to accept first before seeing the guidelines?@ceasesmith wrote:
No, no, and absolutely NOT. You asked for a price and agreed to it. Now you're stuck with the offer and acceptance.
N othing to keep you for asking for more on the next shop, though.
Sans reimbursements?@Book wrote:
My question is how many mystery shoppers get paid more than $60,000 a year (the average US salary)?
@shoptastic wrote:
What about those shops you have to accept first before seeing the guidelines?@ceasesmith wrote:
No, no, and absolutely NOT. You asked for a price and agreed to it. Now you're stuck with the offer and acceptance.
N othing to keep you for asking for more on the next shop, though.
Sometimes you have to accept it with rate attached first.
@Book wrote:
There seems to one of these threads every couple of months. Anyway, I’ll bite. If someone gets $100 an hour for 8 hours a day five days a week, I’m impressed. That’s $200,000 a year (and a bunch of’free’ hambugers).
Boasting about getting $100 an hour is pointless unless you indicate how many hours you actually work at that rate.
In the real world the average mystery shopper gets paid less than $28 an hour (the average hourly pay per hour in the US).
The percentage of mystery shoppers who survive on just mystery shopping fees is extremely low. If you want to boast reveal your monthly or annual income.
My question is how many mystery shoppers get paid more than $60,000 a year (the average US salary)?
@SoCalMama wrote:
I only shop part time now. Currently, I make between $2,000-$3,000 a month, at most, shopping. I used to make over $50,000 every year when I shopped full time.
That is absolutely 100% true.@Book wrote:
@SoCalMama wrote:
I only shop part time now. Currently, I make between $2,000-$3,000 a month, at most, shopping. I used to make over $50,000 every year when I shopped full time.
I guess to get those kind of figures you need good relationships with certain schedulers and get jobs which aren’t necessarily available to the masses.