Employee Cost Calculator — True Cost Beyond Salary (FICA, Benefits, PTO)

A $50,000 salary rarely costs $50,000. Enter the details below to see the true annual cost of a new hire, including taxes, benefits, and overhead.

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Varies by state: 0.5%-8%+. New employers typically pay 2-4%.

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Average employer cost: $600/mo (single), $1,400/mo (family)

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Common: 3-6% of salary. Enter 0 if no retirement plan.

Include vacation + sick + holidays. Average: 15-25 days.

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Training, equipment, software, office space, workers' comp, etc.

The True Cost of Hiring

Why Salary Is Not the Full Cost

When you hire someone at a $50,000 salary, the actual cost to your business is typically $62,500-$70,000. Employer payroll taxes, health insurance, retirement contributions, and paid time off add 25-40% on top of the base salary.

Understanding this multiplier is critical for budgeting, pricing your services, and deciding when you can afford to hire.

Mandatory Employer Costs

FICA (7.65%)

Social Security (6.2% up to $168,600 in 2025) + Medicare (1.45%, no cap). This is non-negotiable — every employer pays it.

FUTA (0.6%)

Federal unemployment tax on the first $7,000 of wages. Maximum $42/employee/year after state credit.

SUTA (0.5-8%+)

State unemployment tax. Rates vary dramatically by state, industry, and claims history. New employers usually pay 2-4%.

Common Voluntary Benefits

Benefit Typical Cost
Health Insurance (single) $7,200/yr
Health Insurance (family) $16,800/yr
401(k) Match (3-6%) $1,500-$3,000
Workers' Compensation $500-$3,000
Training & Development $1,000-$3,000
Equipment & Software $1,000-$5,000

Cost Multiplier by Role

Role Type Multiplier
Part-time (no benefits) 1.08-1.12x
Full-time (basic benefits) 1.25-1.35x
Full-time (full benefits) 1.35-1.50x
Executive (premium package) 1.50-2.00x

Employee vs Contractor

  • Employee: You pay taxes + benefits, but get loyalty, training investment, and control over schedule
  • Contractor: Higher hourly rate, but no taxes or benefits — often cheaper for project-based work
  • Rule of thumb: A contractor at 1.3x the employee hourly rate costs roughly the same after benefits

When Can You Afford to Hire?

  • Revenue threshold: The hire should generate 2-3x their total cost in revenue or savings
  • Cash reserve: Have 3-6 months of their total cost in reserve before hiring
  • Start lean: Consider part-time or contractor arrangements before committing to full-time

When to Use This Calculator

Before Making a Job Offer

Calculate the full burden cost before committing to a salary so you know the true impact on your payroll budget, not just the headline number.

Pricing Your Services

Service businesses must price in labor burden costs. If you only account for base wages, every project is underpriced and your margin disappears.

Evaluating Full-Time vs. Contractor

Contractors cost 1099 rate only. Employees cost salary + 25–40% burden. This calculator makes the true comparison visible before you decide.

Industry Benchmarks

Role Type Typical Base Salary Burden Rate Total Annual Cost
Entry-Level Office Worker $35,000 30% $45,500
Mid-Level Professional $65,000 32% $85,800
Software Engineer $110,000 28% $140,800
Hourly Retail/Service $28,000 35% $37,800
Sales Role (+ commission) $55,000 base 30% $71,500 base only

Source: BLS Employer Costs for Employee Compensation (ECEC). Burden rates vary by industry and benefits package.

Common Mistakes When Calculating Employee Cost

Only counting base salary

FICA (7.65% employer share), workers' comp (0.5–3%), health insurance ($6,000–$12,000/yr), and PTO add 20–40% to your real cost. A $60K employee costs $75K–$84K total.

Forgetting recruiting and onboarding costs

SHRM estimates the average cost to hire is $4,700. Add 2–4 weeks of reduced productivity during onboarding. Factor this into your first-year ROI calculation.

Ignoring equipment and workspace costs

Each desk employee needs hardware ($1,500–$3,000), software licenses ($500–$2,000/yr), and potentially office space. Remote employees still need tech stipends and collaboration tools.

Underestimating manager time cost

A new hire typically needs 5–15% of a senior employee's time during the first 90 days for training and support. That's hidden productivity cost to your existing team.

Data Sources

BLS ECEC
Employer Costs for Employee Compensation survey — quarterly benchmark for total compensation costs by industry and occupation.
IRS Publication 15
Employer's Tax Guide — authoritative source for FICA rates (6.2% Social Security + 1.45% Medicare employer share) and FUTA/SUTA obligations.
SHRM Benchmarking
Society for Human Resource Management annual data on recruiting costs, benefits spending, and employee turnover rates by company size.

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