FTE Task Calculator
Formula Used
1) Gross Workload Hours
Gross Workload Hours = (Tasks per Period × Minutes per Task) ÷ 60
2) Adjusted Task Hours
Adjusted Task Hours = Gross Workload Hours × Complexity Factor × (1 + Rework Rate) × (1 - Automation Rate)
3) Total Required Hours
Total Required Hours = (Adjusted Task Hours × (1 + Buffer Rate)) + Backlog Hours
4) Net Productive Hours per FTE
Net Productive Hours per FTE = Workdays × Hours per Day × Occupancy Rate × (1 - Shrinkage Rate) × Target Utilization
5) Required FTE
Required FTE = Total Required Hours ÷ Net Productive Hours per FTE
This model separates workload assumptions from labor availability. That makes the output more useful for staffing, scheduling, budgeting, and demand planning.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter the task name and your planning period, such as week or month.
- Add task volume and average minutes needed for one task.
- Adjust complexity, rework, automation, backlog, and buffer values.
- Enter workdays, hours per day, occupancy, shrinkage, and target utilization.
- Optionally add hourly cost and current team FTE for gap analysis.
- Click the calculate button to show results above the form.
- Review the metric cards, detailed table, and Plotly graph.
- Use the CSV or PDF buttons to export the output for planning discussions.
Example Data Table
| Scenario | Tasks | Minutes/Task | Complexity | Automation | Rework | Total Required Hours | Net Hours/FTE | Required FTE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Routine Support Queue | 1200 | 8 | 1.00 | 20% | 4% | 139.78 | 120.00 | 1.17 |
| Claims Review Team | 2400 | 12 | 1.10 | 15% | 6% | 523.79 | 112.77 | 4.64 |
| QA Audit Workflow | 800 | 25 | 1.25 | 5% | 3% | 448.40 | 110.00 | 4.08 |
Frequently Asked Questions
1) What is an FTE task calculator?
An FTE task calculator estimates how many full-time equivalents are needed to complete a workload. It converts task demand into labor hours, then compares that demand against practical staffing capacity.
2) How does this calculator convert tasks into FTE?
It starts with task volume and time per task. Then it adjusts for complexity, rework, automation, backlog, and buffer. After that, it divides required hours by usable hours from one FTE.
3) What does shrinkage mean in staffing?
Shrinkage is paid time that cannot be used for direct task handling. It usually includes leave, breaks, meetings, coaching, training, and internal administration.
4) Why should I use target utilization?
Target utilization prevents unrealistic staffing plans. It helps you avoid running teams at maximum load all the time, which reduces burnout risk and leaves room for normal workflow variation.
5) What does automation rate change?
Automation rate reduces the manual share of the workload. A higher automation percentage lowers adjusted task hours and usually decreases the number of FTE required.
6) Should backlog hours be included?
Yes, when you need staffing for existing unfinished work. Backlog hours are added after workload adjustments, so the calculator reflects both new demand and carryover effort.
7) Why compare against current team FTE?
Current team FTE lets you check whether your existing staffing can handle the modeled demand. It helps identify shortages, extra capacity, and workload pressure before schedules are finalized.
8) Can I use this calculator for weekly or monthly planning?
Yes. The method works for any period as long as inputs match the same timeframe. Keep tasks, workdays, backlog, and costs aligned to one period for accurate results.