Enter Payroll Inputs
Use payroll figures for one employee, one crew role, or one labor class. The calculator returns burden rate, loaded cost, and hourly impact.
Example Data Table
This sample shows how burden costs turn a wage figure into a fully loaded labor expense.
| Role | Regular Pay | Overtime | Bonus | Total Burden Cost | Gross Direct Pay | Burden Rate | Loaded Hourly Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HR Coordinator | $3,200.00 | $180.00 | $120.00 | $1,260.00 | $3,500.00 | 36.00% | $29.07 |
| Plant Operator | $4,100.00 | $420.00 | $0.00 | $1,780.00 | $4,520.00 | 39.38% | $39.38 |
| Sales Specialist | $2,900.00 | $0.00 | $650.00 | $1,040.00 | $3,550.00 | 29.30% | $28.79 |
Loaded hourly cost in the sample assumes 164 productive hours for the period.
Formula Used
The calculator separates direct payroll from employer-paid burden costs, then recombines them to show full labor expense.
Gross Direct Pay = Regular Pay + Overtime Pay + Bonuses or Commissions
Total Burden Cost = Taxes + Workers Comp + Insurance + Retirement + PTO + Training + Other Burden
Burden Rate (%) = (Total Burden Cost ÷ Gross Direct Pay) × 100
Total Payroll Cost = Gross Direct Pay + Total Burden Cost
Burden Multiplier = Total Payroll Cost ÷ Gross Direct Pay
Burden Cost Per Hour = Total Burden Cost ÷ Productive Hours
Loaded Hourly Cost = Total Payroll Cost ÷ Productive Hours
A higher burden rate means non-wage labor costs are consuming a larger share of payroll. This helps with pricing, staffing, forecasting, and job costing.
How to Use This Calculator
Start by entering wages for the selected payroll period. Include regular pay, overtime, and any bonuses or commissions that belong to direct compensation.
Next, enter employer-paid costs such as payroll taxes, workers compensation, health insurance, retirement match, and paid leave allocations. Add any remaining labor-related costs under other burden.
Provide productive hours for the same period. This lets the tool convert total payroll burden into an hourly figure for pricing and operational analysis.
Submit the form to see the payroll burden rate, total burden cost, total payroll cost, multiplier, and loaded hourly rate. Use the chart and exports to share results.
Payroll Burden Breakdown Graph
The chart compares direct pay with burden categories, making cost concentration easier to understand.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. What is a payroll burden rate?
Payroll burden rate measures employer-paid labor costs compared with direct wages. It helps show the real cost of employing someone beyond regular pay, overtime, or incentives.
2. Why is burden rate important for budgeting?
It improves labor budgeting by exposing hidden costs like taxes, insurance, retirement contributions, and paid leave. This prevents underpricing and weak staffing forecasts.
3. Should overtime be included in direct pay?
Yes. Overtime is still direct compensation tied to work performed. Including it gives a more realistic direct-pay base before calculating the burden percentage.
4. What costs usually belong in payroll burden?
Common items include employer payroll taxes, workers compensation, medical benefits, retirement match, paid leave allocations, training, uniforms, and other labor-related overhead.
5. What is loaded hourly cost?
Loaded hourly cost is the total payroll cost divided by productive hours. It tells you what one hour of labor truly costs after adding employer-paid burden.
6. Can I use this for one employee or a team?
Yes. You can enter values for one employee, one job role, one department, or a whole crew, as long as all numbers cover the same payroll period.
7. What happens if productive hours are low?
Lower productive hours increase burden cost per hour and loaded hourly cost. This often reveals the effect of downtime, PTO, training time, or scheduling inefficiency.
8. Is a lower burden rate always better?
Not always. A lower rate may reduce costs, but strong benefits can improve hiring and retention. The best rate balances workforce support with sustainable labor economics.