Module 1 of 6

Floor Rate

The minimum you must bill just to break even

The $25/Hour Mirage

A $52,000 employee looks like they cost $25 an hour. The math seems simple: $52,000 ÷ 2,080 hours (40 hrs × 52 weeks) = $25/hr.

That number is clean. Controlled. And completely wrong.

Two assumptions are hiding the truth:

When you fix both assumptions, $25/hour becomes $36/hour—or higher. That's your floor rate: the actual cost per billable hour. Anything you bill below that number means you're paying the client to take your time.

Step 1: Calculate True Cost

Salary is just the starting point. Here's what that $52,000 employee actually costs you:

Item Amount Notes
Base Salary $52,000 What they see on their offer letter
Payroll Taxes (7.65%) $3,978 Social Security + Medicare (employer portion)
Health Insurance $6,000 Your contribution (~$500/mo is common)
Workers Comp $1,560 ~3% for trades, varies by industry
401k Match $1,040 If you offer 2% match
Software/Tools $1,200 Licenses, subscriptions per seat
Overhead Allocation $2,000 Rent, insurance, admin—spread per head
TRUE ANNUAL COST $67,778

Your numbers will vary. The point is: salary ≠ cost.

Step 2: Calculate Real Available Hours

You pay for 2,080 hours. But how many can you actually bill?

Item Hours Notes
Paid Hours (40 × 52) 2,080 What you're paying for
PTO −80 2 weeks vacation
Holidays −56 7 paid holidays
Sick Days −24 3 days average
Training/Meetings −40 Internal time, not billable
Admin/Downtime −80 Lag between jobs, paperwork
AVAILABLE BILLABLE HOURS 1,800

1,800 is optimistic. Many businesses see 1,600 or less when they actually track.

Step 3: The Floor Rate Formula

TRUE COST ÷ AVAILABLE HOURS = FLOOR RATE
$67,778 ÷ 1,800 hrs = $37.65/hour

That's not $25/hour. It's nearly $38/hour—and that's just to break even. No profit. No margin for error. Just survival.

Why This Matters

Let's say you bill a client $75/hour. Feels good, right? Here's what actually happens:

Scenario A: 100% Utilization (all 1,800 hours billed)

Looks great. But 100% utilization is a fantasy.

Scenario B: 50% Utilization (900 hours billed)

At 50% utilization, your realized rate is effectively $37.50/hour ($67,500 ÷ 1,800 paid hours). That's barely above floor. Every additional hour of downtime pushes you deeper into the red.

The Culture Excuse

"Some revenue is better than none."

Not if it's below floor. At $30/hour billed against a $38 floor, every hour you work costs you $8. Ten hours of that "revenue" just cost you $80.

"Our people are salaried—they work harder than subs."

Maybe. But hard work doesn't change math. A sub only costs you when they bill. A salaried employee costs you whether they bill or not.

"We're a get-it-done shop. We don't clock hours."

The ledger doesn't care about culture. Every non-billable hour is cash out the door.

The Uncomfortable Truth: You Need to Track Time

You can calculate floor rate with the reports above. But knowing your floor rate and knowing if you're above it are two different things.

If you're not tracking time, you're guessing. You might think you're billing 1,800 hours a year per person. You're probably not.

Most owners resist time tracking because it feels like micromanagement. But it's not about watching people—it's about seeing where money actually goes. You can't fix what you can't see.

At minimum, track:

You don't need fancy software. A spreadsheet works. What matters is the habit.

How to Calculate Your Own Floor Rate

You don't need fancy software. You need these reports and 30 minutes:

For True Cost:

Report Where to Find It What You're Looking For
Payroll Summary Payroll provider (Gusto, ADP, etc.) Gross wages + employer taxes per employee
Benefits Statement Insurance broker or HR Health, dental, vision costs per employee
Workers Comp Policy Insurance carrier Annual premium ÷ number of employees
401k/Retirement Plan administrator Employer match paid per employee
Software/Licenses Accounting system or credit card Per-seat costs (tools they need to work)
P&L / Overhead QuickBooks, Xero, etc. Total overhead ÷ headcount = per-person allocation

For Available Hours:

Report Where to Find It What You're Looking For
PTO Policy Employee handbook / HR Days of vacation + sick time per year
Holiday Schedule Company calendar Number of paid holidays
Time Tracking Data Timesheets, Clockify, Harvest Actual billable vs. total hours logged
Want a spreadsheet that does the math for you?
Download the Resource Utilization Calculator in the Tools section of the training hub.

Bottom Line

What's Next

Now you know what each person costs per billable hour. But that's just survival—break-even. In Module 2: The Survival Number, we'll calculate what the whole business needs to stay alive: fixed costs, liabilities, owner's draw, and what's actually left after all of it.

Because floor rate tells you if a single hour is profitable. The survival number tells you if the business is.