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Should You Quit Your Job? The Runway and Revenue Math

By Be A Bitch Or Get Rich Editorial · Published 2026-05-09 · // guide

"Should I quit my job to start a business?" is the most common founder question. The Twitter answer is "yes, jump." The conservative answer is "no, never quit until you have replacement income." Both are wrong as universal advice. The right answer depends on the math — your runway, your business's revenue trajectory, your personal risk tolerance, and the structure of your day job.

Here's the framework. Conservative quit thresholds, the bridge income strategy, and the case for staying employed longer than most founder advice suggests.

The Mathematical Quit Threshold

The simplest framework: quit when your business income equals 50-70% of your day-job income, AND you have 9-12 months of runway in cash.

This is more conservative than Twitter advice and less conservative than "save 5 years of expenses first." It's the threshold where the math actually works for most people.

Why 50-70%, not 100%?

The Bridge Income Strategy

For founders with significant fixed expenses (mortgage, kids, healthcare) who can't easily reduce burn, the bridge strategy:

  1. Stay at day job. Run the business as a side hustle until 50-70% threshold.
  2. Negotiate down to 4-day weeks. Some companies will allow this with corresponding pay reduction. Frees up 20% of your time for the business.
  3. Move to part-time consulting. Negotiate departure with a 6-month part-time consulting agreement at the same hourly equivalent. You get $50K-$80K of bridge income for ~10 hours/week, while running the business full-time.
  4. Fully transition. When the business clears the 50-70% threshold AND consulting agreement winds down.

This 12-18 month transition is much less risky than a hard quit. Many founders skip it because it's not glamorous, but the math is significantly better.

The Conservative Case for Staying Longer

Founder content tells you to quit. The conservative case for waiting is:

Health insurance. US employer health insurance is $20K-$30K/year of value (depending on family size). Self-employed health insurance is real money. ACA subsidies help below ~$60K MAGI but evaporate at higher incomes. Plan for this.

401(k) match. Employer matches typically 3-6% of salary. On $120K, that's $3.6K-$7.2K/year of free money you give up.

Compensation predictability. Side-hustle income is volatile. Guaranteed paychecks are not. The financial discipline of consistent income is harder to replicate self-employed.

Skill compounding. Some day jobs make you significantly more valuable as a founder (sales, product management, operations). Quitting too early skips this leverage.

Emergency reserves. Self-employed income drops with one bad month. Salaries don't.

The case for staying matters more for founders with: families to support, large mortgages, modest savings, businesses still in early product-market-fit stage.

The Aggressive Case for Quitting Earlier

The case for quitting before the 50-70% threshold:

Time arbitrage. 40 hours/week of focus produces 5-10x what 5 hours/week of side hustle does, not 8x. There's compounding from continuous attention. The faster you quit, the faster your business scales.

Burnout from dual jobs. Running a business while holding a W-2 is mentally exhausting. Many founders burn out at 18-24 months and either quit the business or quit the W-2 in a non-strategic way. Better to quit before burnout than during.

Day-job constraints. Some companies have non-compete or IP-assignment policies that constrain the business you can build. Staying employed limits the business in those cases.

Market timing. If your market is moving fast (you're competing against well-funded startups), the speed advantage of full-time focus matters more than the runway buffer of staying employed.

The Decision Matrix

Quit earlier if:

Wait longer if:

The Common Mistakes

Quitting too early. You can recover from staying employed an extra 6 months. You can't recover from quitting and burning through savings before the business has product-market fit.

Quitting too late. Some founders stay employed at 80-100% threshold for years, never giving the business the focus needed to break through. The opportunity cost is real.

Quitting based on emotion. "I hate my job" is not a quit signal. "My business clears the threshold AND I have runway" is.

Not negotiating an exit. Many companies will offer severance, accelerated vesting, part-time consulting, or extended health-insurance coverage if you frame the conversation right. Most founders just resign without asking.

Not having a runway plan. "I'll just figure it out" is not a runway plan. Specific number of months at specific burn rate, with specific milestones for course correction.

The Healthcare Question (Critical)

Healthcare alone justifies waiting longer for many founders. Options:

For more on the customer acquisition pieces of getting to the threshold, see first $100K customer acquisition. For the founder mental models that make the transition smoother, see 5 mental models. For the productized service path that gets to threshold faster, see going from zero to $30K MRR solo.

Bottom line Quit threshold: business income at 50-70% of day-job income, plus 9-12 months runway. Earlier with low responsibilities and clear product-market fit. Later with dependents and healthcare considerations. Use bridge income strategies (4-day workweek, part-time consulting) to lower the cliff. Don't quit on emotion; quit on math.

FAQ

What if I have student loans? Should I pay them off before quitting?

Generally no — student loan payments scale with income (via IDR plans), and aggressive payoff before quitting eats your runway. Pay minimums until your business is stable, then accelerate. The exception: very high APR private loans where consolidation/refi to lower rate before quitting makes sense.

Can I quit if I have kids?

Yes, but the math gets more conservative. Healthcare alone for a family is $1.5K-$3K/mo on ACA. Plan for 12-18 months runway minimum. Many founders with kids do bridge strategies (part-time consulting, freelance) for longer than founders without.

What if my side hustle is in the same industry as my employer?

Read your employment agreement. Most have IP-assignment clauses (work you do at the company belongs to the company) and non-compete clauses (you can't compete for X months after leaving). Some states (California) don't enforce non-competes, but the IP issue is real everywhere. If your side hustle is competing, talk to a lawyer.

Should I tell my employer I'm starting a business?

Generally no, until you're ready to leave. Some employers will: (a) restrict your time/projects, (b) accelerate your departure timeline, or (c) be petty about it. The exceptions: small companies where the relationship is friendly, or companies with explicit policies allowing side projects (more common at startups).