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How to Calculate Your Job Search Runway

Your runway is how long your search can last before money gets tight. Here is how to calculate it, and why that single number should shape your entire strategy.

When you lose a job, the first question is usually emotional. The more useful first question is financial: how long can this search actually last? That number is your runway, and almost every smart decision in a job search flows from it.

What runway means

Runway is the number of months you can cover your expenses before your savings run low. A founder thinks about runway constantly. A job seeker should too, because a search is a project with a budget, and the budget is your time.

The simple formula

You only need three inputs.

  1. Cash you can spend on the search. Liquid savings you are willing to draw down, not retirement accounts.
  2. Severance value. If you received severance, count it as cash. If it is paid in weekly installments, multiply the weeks by your net weekly pay.
  3. Monthly burn. What you actually spend each month to live.

Then:

Runway in months = (savings + severance) / monthly burn

If you have 30,000 dollars in usable savings, 12 weeks of severance at 2,000 dollars per week, and you spend 6,000 dollars a month, your runway is (30,000 + 24,000) / 6,000, which is 9 months.

Why the number changes your strategy

The runway figure is not there to scare you. It is there to set your pace.

  • Tight runway, under 3 months. Move with urgency. Prioritize warm introductions and roles you are a strong match for. This is not the time to wait three weeks for a perfect application.
  • On track, 3 to 6 months. This is the typical range for a tech search. Keep a steady weekly rhythm and protect the runway by trimming non essential spending early, not late.
  • Comfortable, 6 months or more. You have room to run a focused, high quality search. Resist the urge to spray applications. Be selective and go deep.

Recalculate when things change

Runway is not a one time calculation. A new freelance contract extends it. An unexpected expense shortens it. Severance ending changes the math. Revisit it monthly so your pace always matches reality.

You can run the numbers in seconds with the runway calculator, and Scout will pace your whole 90 day plan to the result. The point is not the exact figure. The point is that once you know your runway, you stop guessing and start deciding.

Put this into action

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