| Scenario | Workers | Shifts/day | Days | Visitors/day | Reserve | Contingency | Total suits |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small fit-out | 8 | 1 | 10 | 1 | 10 | 10% | 110 |
| Medium refurbishment | 18 | 2 | 14 | 3 | 25 | 10% | 584 |
| Large containment scope | 45 | 2 | 30 | 6 | 60 | 15% | 3,381 |
- Worker suits = Workers × Shifts/Day × Project Days × Suits/Worker/Shift
- Visitor suits = Visitors/Day × Project Days × Suits/Visitor
- Subtotal = Worker suits + Visitor suits + Reserve suits
- Contingency suits = ceil(Subtotal × Contingency% ÷ 100)
- Total suits = ceil(Subtotal + Contingency suits) . Case quantities are optional: Cases = ceil(Total ÷ Suits/Case).
- Enter the number of workers who require suits each shift.
- Set shifts per day and total project days in scope.
- Adjust suits per worker when multiple changes are expected.
- Add expected visitors per day and suits per visitor.
- Include a fixed reserve for damage, rework, and weather.
- Set a contingency percentage to cover uncertainty.
- Press Calculate to see results above, then download CSV or PDF.
Demand drivers on active sites
Disposable suit demand rises with task intensity, contamination risk, and supervision requirements. Count every worker who enters controlled zones, then apply shifts per day and working days. When hot work, coating, or cleanup occurs, plan more changes per shift to prevent cross‑contamination and discomfort. Visitors such as inspectors and client representatives should be included because they often require full protective coverage during walkdowns. For long durations, consider phased deliveries to protect packaging and reduce theft while keeping emergency stock at the gatehouse overnight securely too.
Using inputs to reflect reality
Workers is the headcount needing suits each shift. Suits per worker per shift captures change frequency, for example one suit for normal duties and two for dusty removal or chemical handling. Visitors per day represents intermittent access. Reserve suits cover torn garments, incorrect sizes, or weather events. Contingency adds a percentage buffer and is rounded up, helping procurement avoid stockouts.
Interpreting the results section
The breakdown separates worker suits, visitor suits, and reserve suits, then adds contingency to produce the final total. This structure makes it easy to justify quantities during safety reviews and cost checks. If you enter suits per case, the calculator converts totals into case quantities and shows surplus suits after rounding, supporting storage planning and staged deliveries.
Procurement and logistics recommendations
Order by total suits required, then schedule replenishment against weekly consumption. Track usage per crew and adjust suits per worker per shift when tasks change. Maintain a locked reserve near entry points to reduce delays. If multiple suit sizes are used, split cases by expected size mix and keep a small assortment for visitors to minimize waste.
Quality control and compliance tracking
Downloadable CSV records inputs and outputs for audit trails, toolbox talks, and closeout documentation. PDF summaries help supervisors approve orders quickly. Review totals whenever project days extend, shift patterns change, or visitor frequency increases. A consistent counting method supports compliance programs and keeps controlled areas supplied without overspending.
It estimates how many suit changes one worker needs in a single shift. Increase it for dusty tasks, coating work, spill response, or frequent zone exits that require clean re-entry.
Use average visitors per day across the project duration. If visits are clustered, enter a higher average or add extra reserve suits to cover inspection peaks without delaying access.
The calculator multiplies the subtotal by your contingency percent and rounds up. That buffer protects against damaged suits, sizing errors, schedule extensions, and unexpected personnel increases.
Enter the number of suits in one case to estimate cases required. The tool rounds up to whole cases and reports the surplus suits created by case rounding.
Reserve depends on site conditions and controls. Many teams keep one to three days of consumption as reserve, plus a small visitor assortment, especially when deliveries are uncertain.
Recalculate whenever worker count, shifts, project days, task type, or visitor frequency changes. Updating the inputs keeps orders aligned with safety requirements and avoids overbuying.