Calculator Inputs
Example Data Table
| Meeting | Attendees | Duration | Avg Rate | Overhead | Total Cost | Monthly Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weekly Operations Sync | 8 | 60 min | USD 40.00 | 28% | USD 506.60 | USD 2,026.40 |
| Leadership Review | 6 | 90 min | USD 70.00 | 35% | USD 1,211.25 | USD 4,845.00 |
| Project Kickoff | 12 | 75 min | USD 45.00 | 25% | USD 1,068.75 | USD 1,068.75 |
Formula Used
Loaded Hourly Rate = Average Hourly Rate × (1 + Overhead % ÷ 100)
Meeting Labor Cost = Attendees × Meeting Hours × Loaded Hourly Rate
Preparation Cost = Attendees × Preparation Hours × Loaded Hourly Rate
Follow-Up Cost = Attendees × Follow-Up Hours × Loaded Hourly Rate
Opportunity Cost = Meeting Labor Cost × Opportunity Cost %
Fixed Costs = Room + Software + Catering + Travel + Other
Total Meeting Cost = Labor + Preparation + Follow-Up + Opportunity + Fixed Costs
Wasted Cost = Total Meeting Cost × (1 − Productive Time %)
Monthly Cost = Total Meeting Cost × Meetings Per Month
Annual Cost = Monthly Cost × 12
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter the meeting name and preferred currency code.
- Add total attendees and meeting duration in minutes.
- Provide the average hourly pay for participants.
- Include benefits and overhead as a percentage.
- Estimate preparation and follow-up time per attendee.
- Enter room, software, catering, travel, and other direct costs.
- Set an opportunity cost percentage for lost focus time.
- Estimate productive time to measure waste realistically.
- Enter how many times the meeting happens monthly.
- Click calculate to view total cost, waste, recurring impact, and the graph.
FAQs
1. What does this calculator measure?
It estimates the full financial impact of a meeting. That includes labor, preparation, follow-up, overhead, fixed expenses, recurring cost, and estimated waste.
2. Why include overhead percentage?
Base pay alone understates real cost. Overhead captures benefits, payroll taxes, equipment, facilities, and support expenses tied to employee time.
3. What is opportunity cost here?
Opportunity cost reflects lost productivity from time pulled away from focused work. It adds a planning buffer for interruptions and context switching.
4. How should I estimate productive time?
Use a realistic percentage. If half the meeting drives decisions and half feels repetitive, enter about 50%. Honest inputs create better cost control.
5. Can I use blended salaries?
Yes. Enter the average hourly rate across attendees. For teams with very different pay levels, calculate a weighted average first.
6. Why track preparation and follow-up separately?
Many meetings create hidden work outside the calendar slot. Separate inputs reveal the true time burden, not just time spent in the room.
7. When is a meeting too expensive?
That depends on expected value. A high-cost meeting may still be worthwhile if it unlocks fast decisions, removes risk, or prevents larger losses.
8. How can I reduce meeting cost quickly?
Trim attendee count, shorten duration, replace status updates with notes, assign clear owners, and avoid recurring sessions without strong decisions.