The salary is only half the cost of a new hire.
Add CPP, EI, vacation pay, WorkSafeBC, EHT, benefits, tools, software, and the seat at the table. Then see the revenue you actually need to generate — before tax and after — to justify the hire.
Pick salary or hourly at the top. Enter the pay. Adjust WCB to your industry. Optional benefits and additional expenses are zero by default — add only what applies. Scroll to the bottom for the revenue you need to generate to make the hire pay for itself.
Pay basis
Salary or hourly — we’ll annualizeStatutory employer costs
CPP, EI, vacation, WCB, EHT — non-negotiableOptional benefits
Zero by default — only add what you offerAdditional employer expenses
Tools, tech, space — the seat at the tableWhat the hire actually costs you
All-in, before and after corp taxFull cost breakdown
| Line item | % of base | Annual cost | After corp tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| Direct wages | |||
| Base wages | — | $0 | $0 |
| Vacation pay | — | $0 | $0 |
| Total cash pay (T4) | — | $0 | $0 |
| Statutory employer contributions | |||
| CPP employer (5.95% base + enhanced) | — | $0 | $0 |
| CPP2 employer (4% on YAMPE–YMPE band) | — | $0 | $0 |
| EI employer (1.4× employee rate) | — | $0 | $0 |
| WorkSafeBC premium | — | $0 | $0 |
| Employer Health Tax | — | $0 | $0 |
| Statutory subtotal | — | $0 | $0 |
| Optional benefits | |||
| RRSP / DPSP employer match | — | $0 | $0 |
| Extended health benefits | — | $0 | $0 |
| Disability / life insurance | — | $0 | $0 |
| Benefits subtotal | — | $0 | $0 |
| Additional expenses | |||
| Tools / equipment | — | $0 | $0 |
| Phone allowance | — | $0 | $0 |
| Vehicle allowance | — | $0 | $0 |
| Software subscriptions | — | $0 | $0 |
| Office rent allocation | — | $0 | $0 |
| Training & pro dev | — | $0 | $0 |
| Other annual expenses | — | $0 | $0 |
| Expenses subtotal | — | $0 | $0 |
| Total annual cost (pre-tax) | — | $0 | $0 |
| Corporate tax saved on the deduction | — | — | $0 |
| After-tax cost to the corporation | — | — | $0 |
What this hire needs to bring in to pay for itself
Two industry yardsticks. Your gross margin turns revenue into gross profit (revenue minus direct cost of sale). Your labour efficiency ratio (LER) is how many dollars of gross profit each dollar of direct labour should generate. Pick a target and we’ll back into the revenue.
Questions to ask yourself before making the hire
The math is the easy part. These are the questions that decide whether the hire works.
What problem am I actually hiring to solve — and is a hire the right answer?
Before adding a head, write down the specific problem in one sentence: “I can’t take any more clients because I’m doing the bookkeeping myself,” or “Service calls slip because nobody owns scheduling.” Then ask whether a person is the best lever.
Sometimes the answer is software (a scheduling tool, an automated bookkeeping pipeline), a process change, a contractor, or raising prices. A full-time hire is the most expensive and least reversible option — it should win the comparison on merit, not default.
Do I have the cash flow to cover them for at least 6 months if revenue dips?
The total annual cost above is your monthly cash commitment for as long as the role exists. CPP, EI, vacation, and benefits don’t pause when work is slow. Severance and final vacation payout don’t pause either.
Rule of thumb: have six months of the full loaded cost in reserve before you sign the offer letter. If you don’t, the hire is borrowing from your future self — and if the bet doesn’t pay off in time, the business gets squeezed by something that was supposed to grow it.
Is the role designed so success and failure are both obvious within 90 days?
Most bad hires aren’t bad people — they’re people in roles where nobody can tell if they’re winning. Before the offer goes out, write down the two or three things this person needs to produce in their first 90 days. Not activities (“learn the systems”) but outputs (“close 12 of last quarter’s open files,” “build a working scheduling cadence with zero missed callbacks for two weeks”).
If you can’t articulate the outputs, the role probably isn’t ready to hire for yet. Spend another week clarifying it — that week is the cheapest investment you’ll make on this hire.
What’s the revenue this person needs to generate — or unlock — to be worth it?
The revenue calculator above answers this directly for billable / production roles. For overhead roles (admin, ops, finance), the question is different: what revenue does this hire let me unlock by freeing my own time, or by preventing churn, or by reducing errors?
Quantify it. “Hiring an admin frees 8 hours/week of my time, which I’ll spend on $300/hr billable work” = $124,800 of unlocked annual capacity. If the loaded cost of the admin is $65K, the math works. If you’re honest and the freed time would mostly go to lower-value work, the math probably doesn’t.
What’s my labour efficiency ratio today — and what will it be after this hire?
LER is gross profit ÷ total direct labour cost. Pull last year’s numbers, run the calculation, and you’ll have a starting line.
Healthy service businesses run 2.0–3.0×. Below 1.5× usually means the business is over-staffed for its revenue or under-priced for its cost base. Above 4× might mean you’re under-staffed and leaving capacity on the table.
Project the LER after the hire under realistic ramp-up assumptions (most people don’t hit full productivity for 90–180 days). If the post-hire LER stays above your floor, you’re probably fine. If it dips into the red, you’re probably hiring too early.
Have I priced for this cost, or am I planning to absorb it?
One of the most common mistakes: hiring a $75K bookkeeper to handle a roster of $200/month bookkeeping clients. The math literally cannot work, regardless of how good the hire is.
Before you hire, look at your billable rates or your unit pricing. If they were set when you were a solo operator working from your kitchen table, they probably don’t price in the loaded cost of a team. Raising prices feels harder than hiring, but raising prices first is what makes the hire affordable. Hiring first and hoping prices catch up is what makes the hire a slow-motion bleed.
What does the role look like in 18 months — and does the person I’m hiring want that?
You’re not hiring for the job today; you’re hiring for the job 12–18 months from now, because that’s how long it takes them to fully ramp and start delivering at peak. Picture what the role looks like once they’re humming — broader scope? Managing a small team? More autonomy?
Now ask: does the person sitting across from you in the interview actually want that job? Or are they accepting an offer for the job today because they need the cheque, and you’ll be back at the recruiter’s in 14 months when their growth need and your role need diverge?
Have I budgeted for the hidden costs — recruiting, onboarding, ramp time?
The calculator above gives you the run-rate cost. The first-year cost is higher because of:
- Recruiting — agency fees (15–25% of base if used), job-board spend, your own time interviewing.
- Onboarding — your hours and your team’s hours training, plus their full salary while they’re below productive output.
- Ramp lost productivity — most knowledge-work roles are at 50% productivity in month 1, 75% by month 3, and full by month 6. That gap is real cost.
- Equipment setup — software seats, hardware, training subscriptions, sometimes signing bonuses or relocation.
A reasonable estimate is to add 15–25% on top of the year-one loaded cost for these first-year extras. For senior or technical roles, it can be more.
Could a contractor or fractional hire test the role first?
If you’re uncertain about the workload, the scope, or whether the role even works the way you imagine it, a contractor or fractional engagement is the cheaper experiment. You’ll pay a higher hourly rate, but you skip CPP, EI, vacation, WCB, EHT, and benefits — and either side can walk without termination costs.
The right use case: you think you need a part-time controller, but you’re not sure if it’s 8 hours/month or 8 hours/week. Hire a fractional CFO for 6 months. By the end, you’ll know exactly what role to scope and you’ll have validated cash-flow evidence for the hire.
If this hire doesn’t work out in 6 months, what does that cost me — and am I prepared to act fast?
BC employment standards require notice or pay in lieu (or both) when terminating without cause — the minimum scales with tenure, and common law severance can be much longer. A bad hire that drags on for two years is exponentially more expensive than one you part ways with at 90 days.
Build a 30/60/90 check-in cadence with explicit decision points. If by day 90 the outputs you wrote down at the start aren’t in sight, have an honest conversation. Most owners delay this conversation by 3–6 months out of conflict avoidance — and that delay is what makes the bad hire genuinely expensive. The hire itself wasn’t the mistake; not acting on the early signal was.
Let’s walk through your numbers before you sign the offer.
The calculator gets you the loaded cost. The hard part — scoping the role, pricing for it, forecasting cash flow, and deciding when to act — is the conversation. That’s what we do.
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