Task Delay Impact Calculator

See delay effects across timelines and budgets. Compare buffer strength, penalties, risk, and recovery speed. Plan smarter actions before missed work creates broader disruption.

Calculator Inputs

Reset

Example Data Table

Task Planned Hours Delay Hours Buffer Hours Team Size Dependencies Net Delay Total Impact
Integration Testing 48 14 4 5 5 10.00 hrs $5,307.97

This sample shows how a moderate delay grows after buffers, downstream dependencies, rework, penalties, and opportunity cost are combined.

Formula Used

  1. Net Delay Hours = max(Delay Hours - Buffer Hours, 0)
  2. Schedule Shift Days = Net Delay Hours / Workday Hours
  3. Direct Labor Cost = Net Delay Hours × Team Size × Hourly Cost
  4. Cascade Factor = min(1.5, 0.20 + 0.08 × Tasks Affected + 0.12 × Risk Multiplier)
  5. Dependency Impact Hours = Net Delay Hours × Dependency Count × Cascade Factor
  6. Dependency Cost = Dependency Impact Hours × Hourly Cost × 0.60
  7. Rework Hours = Planned Hours × Rework % × Priority Weight/5 × Risk Multiplier
  8. Rework Cost = Rework Hours × Hourly Cost
  9. Opportunity Cost = Schedule Shift Days × Opportunity Cost Per Day × (0.60 + Priority Weight/5)
  10. Penalty Cost = ceil(Schedule Shift Days) × Deadline Penalty Per Day
  11. Total Cost Impact = Labor Cost + Dependency Cost + Rework Cost + Opportunity Cost + Penalty Cost
  12. Recovery Days Needed = Net Delay Hours / Recovery Hours Per Day

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the task, project, and owner details for context.
  2. Add planned task hours, current delay hours, and any built-in schedule buffer.
  3. Provide team size and hourly cost to estimate direct labor exposure.
  4. Enter affected tasks and dependency count to model cascading schedule disruption.
  5. Set priority, risk, and rework values to reflect urgency and execution uncertainty.
  6. Add opportunity cost, penalty cost, and recovery hours to quantify broader business impact.
  7. Press Calculate Impact to show results above the form and below the header.
  8. Use the CSV and PDF buttons to export the generated impact summary.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What does this calculator measure?

It estimates how one delayed task influences labor cost, schedule movement, downstream dependency load, rework, deadline penalties, and recovery effort.

2. Why are buffer hours important?

Buffer hours absorb part of the delay before it affects the wider schedule. A larger buffer lowers net delay hours and often reduces penalties.

3. What is opportunity cost here?

Opportunity cost represents lost daily value when the task slips. It can stand for delayed revenue, slower delivery, missed utilization, or reduced throughput.

4. How should I choose the priority weight?

Use 1 for low-impact work and 5 for mission-critical tasks. Higher priority increases the business effect of every delayed hour.

5. What does the risk multiplier do?

It amplifies uncertainty. Higher values raise the dependency effect, rework exposure, and severity score when fragile tasks face delays.

6. Is the recovery probability guaranteed?

No. It is a directional planning signal based on severity and recovery capacity. Real outcomes still depend on staffing, blockers, and decision speed.

7. Can this calculator work for personal productivity?

Yes. Replace labor and penalty values with personal estimates such as client value, missed commitments, or time needed to catch up.

8. When should I export the report?

Export when you need to share assumptions, compare scenarios, or document why recovery actions, staffing changes, or escalation decisions were taken.

Related Calculators

Time Value CalculatorLost Time CostTask Tradeoff CalculatorWork Priority CostActivity Cost EstimatorProductivity Loss CostTask Switching CostDelay Cost CalculatorFocus Loss CostMissed Opportunity Cost

Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.