Finance Calculator
Break-even Hiring
Model fully-loaded hiring cost, ramp time, and expected monthly impact to estimate break-even timing.
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Hiring assumptions
Include salary, taxes, benefits, tooling, and manager overhead.
Use either extra revenue or cost savings, not both.
Defaults to 2 months before the hire is fully productive.
Live results
Snapshot
Break-even estimate
Incomplete
Enter monthly hire cost and expected impact to estimate payback.
Ramp time
2 months
This model treats ramp as a pure cost period and assumes monthly impact becomes steady after ramp finishes.
Break-even Hiring Calculator
Use this calculator to estimate how long it takes for a new hire to cover their cost based on expected monthly impact and ramp time. It gives a quick hiring view, not a full workforce forecast.
Explanation
Break-even hiring is calculated from total hiring cost and expected monthly impact. Total cost includes salary, employer taxes, benefits, tools, and management overhead. If ramp time delays productivity, break-even takes longer.
When to Use
Use this when planning a new hire, comparing hiring versus outsourcing, or estimating payback time for revenue roles. It also helps when preparing hiring plans for investors.
Common Mistakes
Founders often ignore payroll taxes, underestimate ramp time, or assume immediate productivity. Those choices can make break-even look shorter than it really is.
FAQ
Fully loaded cost includes salary, employer taxes, benefits, tools, and management overhead.
Ramp time is the period before a new hire reaches full productivity.
For many startups, a break-even period of 6 to 12 months is considered reasonable. The right target depends on the role and stage of the business.