Calculator inputs
Enter compensation, coverage, and hidden-cost assumptions to estimate absence impact.
Example data table
This sample shows how one absence event can combine direct payroll effects and indirect operational losses.
| Scenario | Pay Basis | Absent Days | Coverage % | Paid Leave Cost | Replacement Cost | Hidden Cost | Total Episode Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Support analyst sick leave | Annual salary | 3 | 70% | $750.00 | $588.00 | $534.00 | $1,872.00 |
| Coordinator urgent time off | Hourly wage | 2 | 50% | $336.00 | $280.00 | $266.00 | $882.00 |
| Manager medical appointment block | Annual salary | 1 | 40% | $310.00 | $168.00 | $221.00 | $699.00 |
Formula used
Core pay formulas
Effective hourly pay = Annual salary ÷ (Workdays per year × Hours per day)
Effective daily pay = Effective hourly pay × Hours per day
Paid leave cost = Effective daily pay × Absent days × Paid leave rate
Benefits cost = Paid leave cost × Benefits rate
Coverage and hidden cost formulas
Covered hours = Absent days × Hours per day × Coverage level
Replacement coverage cost = Covered hours × Replacement hourly rate
Overtime premium = Replacement coverage cost × (Overtime multiplier − 1)
Total absence cost = Direct costs + hidden costs + rework + coordination time
This estimator treats absence cost as both a payroll event and an operational disruption. Adjust assumptions to match policy, staffing model, and labor rules.
How to use this calculator
- Choose the currency and compensation basis.
- Enter annual salary or hourly wage details.
- Set absent days and hours per workday.
- Estimate how much work is covered by others.
- Add replacement rate and overtime assumptions.
- Include benefits, payroll taxes, and productivity loss.
- Account for manager time, admin time, and rework.
- Enter expected annual absence episodes for annualized impact.
- Submit the form to see results above the calculator.
- Download the result summary as CSV or PDF.
FAQs
1. What does this calculator estimate?
It estimates the cost of an absence episode by combining paid leave, benefits, payroll taxes, temporary coverage, overtime premium, productivity loss, disruption, coordination time, and rework.
2. Why include hidden costs?
Absence cost is often larger than payroll alone. Teams may lose output, managers spend time adjusting schedules, and work may need correction later. Hidden costs make planning more realistic.
3. What is paid leave rate?
Paid leave rate is the share of normal daily pay the employee still receives during the absence. Use 100% for fully paid leave, 0% for unpaid leave, or anything between.
4. How should I set coverage level?
Coverage level estimates how much of the missing work is handled by coworkers, temps, or supervisors. Higher coverage may reduce delays, but it can also raise replacement and overtime costs.
5. When should I use annual salary instead of hourly wage?
Use annual salary for salaried roles and hourly wage for time-based roles. The calculator converts either option into comparable daily and hourly values for costing.
6. Does this replace payroll or HRIS reporting?
No. It is an estimate for planning, benchmarking, and scenario analysis. Payroll, policy, and compliance systems remain the source of record for exact payouts and statutory treatment.
7. How can HR teams use annualized absence cost?
Annualized cost helps compare departments, justify staffing buffers, evaluate wellness initiatives, and prioritize attendance interventions where operational risk or replacement expense is highest.
8. What is a good next step after using this estimate?
Compare results across job families, absence types, and sites. Then test different coverage levels, overtime assumptions, or policy changes to see where total cost drops fastest.