@jtevanMT
I recently took a job that has unlimited pto (started Monday). It was a substantial pay raise but I’m starting to grow concerned with the pto aspect. I previously had a job that paid less but I had 24 or so days of pto and I could use them whenever and however. In your experience how does the unlimited pto work?
In my experience this very much depends on your boss , company management, etc. Usually this is a play to reduce risk for the company number crunchers on PTO that would need to get paid out to employees. It gets it off their books. Unfortunately bad management can really ruin it for everyone.
I work in digital health and have very reasonable leadership above me. I usually take 2 full week family vacations a year. The occasional friday here and there for an extended weekend. Plenty time off around the holidays (I have 8 days marked off for this xmas).
For "emergency" time off (accident, drs appointments, etc) it gets approved without question and we all work together to cover as needed.
For myself and those that report to me, we're a team all working together to create value. I've never denied a PTO request. I want volunteers not hostages. If someone's job performance is not up to snuff we're already having a discussion and working on a way to improve. I've also never had anybody trying to game the system. If anything I need to push my direct reports to take more time off.
Outside of my specific employer, a younger/junior level employee with reasonable management I wouldn't expect problems as long as they are completing the work assigned in a timely manner. Plan ahead for longer PTO and do your best to make sure it doesn't impact work that you are supposed to own. If it may affect results and we can't make the timing work (employee had vacation planned 6 months ago and a new project started recently with tight deadlines) work with your boss to create a plan to ensure the impact is minimal.
My experience moving up the ladder is that it gets harder to feel like you can take all that time off if you're taking ownership of ensuring success of the things that fall under you. Unless I'm in limited cell phone service I never feel like I'm fully out.
My hunting has been greatly affected over the last 5 years, but most of that is two little kids (one with some medical conditions) more so than job limitations. I've not felt comfortable just leaving the house for 48-72 hours for a short hunting trip like I used to. I've ended up doing a lot more local fishing lately b/c a couple hours is less of a burden on the wife than a full day or multiple days out. That'll change as the kids get older (at least that's what I tell myself).