
Deciding when to tell your employer you are leaving is one of the most uncomfortable moments in a job search. Say something too early and you risk unnecessary tension. Leave it too late and you can damage trust or create avoidable stress.
There is no single perfect moment, but there is a right approach depending on where you are in the process and what is at stake.
Why timing matters more than people realise
Resigning is not just a formality. It affects notice periods, handovers, team planning, and often your professional reputation long after you have moved on. Employers rarely react badly because someone is leaving. They react badly when they feel blindsided or misled.
The right timing balances honesty with self-protection.
The mistake many people make early on
One of the most common errors candidates make is telling their employer too early, often out of loyalty or anxiety. Hearing things like “I wanted to be transparent” is understandable, but transparency before certainty usually creates more problems than it solves.
Until you have something concrete, nothing is guaranteed. Interviews can stall. Offers can change. Hiring freezes can appear overnight. Sharing intentions before you are in control puts you in a vulnerable position with very little upside.
As a general rule, interest is not intent. Interviews are not outcomes.
The safest point to speak up
For most professionals, the safest and most appropriate time to tell your employer you are leaving is after you have received a formal offer in writing and have accepted it, subject to references if applicable.
At this stage:
- You have clarity on role, salary, and start date
- You can give a confident notice period
- You are not speculating or hedging
- You are in control of the conversation
This protects you while allowing your employer time to plan.
What about verbal offers?
Verbal offers can feel reassuring, but they are not binding. Details can change and occasionally roles fall through. Until you have a written offer, you are still exposed.
If you are under pressure to give an answer quickly, it is reasonable to say you need written confirmation before making any commitments internally.
This is professional, not evasive.
When earlier conversations might make sense
There are exceptions. In some situations, earlier communication can be appropriate, but only when the relationship and context support it.
Examples include:
- Very senior or leadership roles with long notice periods
- Transparent internal progression discussions that have stalled
- Organisations where open career conversations are genuinely encouraged
Even then, it is important to frame the conversation carefully. Focus on your long term goals rather than imminent departure. Avoid timelines until you have certainty.
How to handle counteroffers and pressure
Once you share your decision, you may be met with counteroffers or emotional responses. This is normal.
Before you resign, it helps to be clear with yourself about why you are leaving. If the reasons are structural, such as role scope, progression, or culture, a last minute salary increase rarely changes the outcome long term.
Counteroffers can also complicate your exit. Employers may question commitment, and expectations often change after the conversation.
If you have decided to move on, clarity and calm delivery are usually better than prolonged negotiation.
What to say when you do tell them
The conversation does not need to be long or dramatic. A simple, respectful explanation is enough.
Focus on:
- Gratitude for the opportunity
- The fact that you have accepted another role
- Your intention to support a smooth transition
You do not owe a detailed justification. Keep it professional and measured.
Protecting your reputation on the way out
How you leave is often remembered more clearly than how you arrived. Giving appropriate notice, supporting handovers, and maintaining professionalism pays off long after you have moved on.
Industries are smaller than they appear. Future references, referrals, and even rehiring opportunities can be influenced by how you handle this moment.
The bottom line
If you are asking when to tell your employer you are leaving, the answer is usually not as early as your instincts suggest.
Wait until you have certainty. Be clear, calm, and respectful. Protect yourself first, then your relationships.
Handled well, this moment does not need to be stressful. It can simply be the closing chapter of one role and the start of the next.

Jazz Thomson
Digital Marketing Manager
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