$700,000? That should cover the move…

While some are content to pay for checked luggage, one CEO saw it necessary to spend a little more on their move…

$700,000? That should cover the move…

Moving offices can certainly vary in price. Going down the road? A few boxes in the car should do it. Got a lot of stuff? Maybe a removal truck.

Flying overseas will require dropping a bit more cash on getting all your stuff over, although those with children (or those who are children at heart) may remember Disney’s Up demonstrating how to move an entire building with a few balloons (No, HRM does not recommend you try this…)

While no helium was involved, Andrew Mackenzie, CEO of BHP Billiton’s move from London to Melbourne is perhaps just as fantastical, if only for the amount spent.

An organisation known for spoiling their higher-ups, BHP paid Mackenzie $700,000 in “relocation allowance”, a small part of his $13.6m remuneration package.

The money wasn’t going to waste, and was subject to 46.5% tax, and much was used to for the stamp duty on Mackenzie’s new Melbourne home, The Sydney Morning Herald (SMH) reported.

''We could move about 1000 of his employees for that,'' Matthew Windsor of Man With a Van, told SMH. ''The average cost of a move for an average family in Melbourne, with a two-bedroom place, you would put at around $700 at the top end.''

 

Does this seem like too much, or is it fair considering the circumstances? How much did your biggest move cost you?

Recent articles & video

Over 200 employers banned from hiring skilled migrants under AEWV

Fonterra bans EY staff facing misconduct probe: report

Tesla to lay off over 6,000 employees: reports

What are the top factors driving women to leave employers?

Most Read Articles

Kiwi firms still looking to hire despite challenging economy

'We need to be constantly pulse-checking with employees'

Woolworths pleads guilty in $1.1-million wage underpayment case