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Manufacturing Overtime vs New Hire Calculator

When the schedule runs hot, overtime is the quick fix, but at some point another operator is cheaper. This compares the yearly cost of covering open production hours with overtime against the fully loaded cost of an added hire, and finds the break-even point where adding headcount starts to win.

Your situation

Enter the recurring extra hours and the pay rates. Adjust the cost assumptions to match your business.
hrs/wk
The recurring open hours beyond your current crew's regular schedule, across the shifts that run hot.
$
The operators who would work the overtime. The 2026 manufacturing production average is about 30.10 dollars per hour.
$
New operators often start a step or two below the crew rate.
Cost assumptions
Overtime over 40 hours a week is federally 1.5x base pay. The soft-cost uplift is optional; sustained overtime on a production floor carries real fatigue, scrap, injury, and turnover costs, and adding even 10 to 25 percent here often tips a close call toward hiring.

Hire once overtime passes

0hrs/wk
Overtime / year
$0
New hire / year
$0
recommendation

How the costs compare

This is a cost estimate, so calibrate it to your business. The honest comparison depends on your real wage rates, benefits load, hiring cost, and how steady the overload is. Overtime is usually cheaper for short bursts and a new hire wins once the extra hours are steady and near a full role. The pure dollar gap is often close, so the deciding factors tend to be the soft costs of overtime and the spare capacity a hire brings. Confirm overtime against the wage and hour rules that apply to you. These calculators give estimates and general business information, not HR, payroll, or legal advice.
Settle the overtime question with the full planner
The in-depth Excel workbook compares standing overtime against an added headcount across a full year, with the crossover point and the budget case.
Get the Overtime vs New Hire Planner

How the overtime vs hire decision works in a plant

Overtime is a variable cost: you pay only for the extra hours, but at a premium, federally 1.5 times base pay for hours over 40 in a week. A new operator is a fixed cost: full wages plus benefits whether the overload is 10 hours or 40, plus a one-time cost to recruit, screen, and train them to rate. Because one cost is variable and the other is fixed, there is a break-even point. Below it, overtime is cheaper. Above it, the hire is.

Finding the break-even

The break-even is the weekly overtime hours at which the yearly overtime bill equals the fully loaded yearly cost of the new operator. Divide the hire's loaded annual cost by the overtime hourly rate times the weeks you run, and you have it. At the 2026 manufacturing production average of about 30.10 dollars an hour, overtime with a 30 percent benefits load runs near 59 dollars an hour, and a loaded new operator costs roughly 81,000 dollars a year, which puts the break-even near 26 hours a week. Run more steady overtime than that and the hire pays for itself.

The dollars are only part of it

Sustained overtime carries costs that never show up on the wage line: fatigue, scrap, recordable injuries, and the turnover that follows. A new operator adds capacity beyond the immediate gap, deepens your cross-training matrix, and does not burn out your existing crew. Because the pure cost gap near the break-even is often small, those factors usually decide a close call, which is why the soft-cost lever is there to test.

When overtime still makes sense

For short seasonal pushes, launch ramps, or unpredictable order spikes, overtime is the right tool. You avoid the fixed cost and the risk of overstaffing for volume that will not last. The trap is letting temporary overtime quietly become the standing schedule, where it erodes margins and people without anyone deciding to hire.

At how many overtime hours should a plant hire?
It depends on your pay rates and hiring cost, but the break-even commonly lands somewhere around 30 to 40 overtime hours a week for one role. This tool calculates the exact figure from your numbers. Past that, on a steady basis, adding an operator is usually cheaper.
How is overtime pay calculated?
Under federal law, non-exempt employees earn 1.5 times their regular rate for hours over 40 in a workweek. Some states, contracts, and union agreements are more generous, and shift differentials change the regular rate. Use your actual overtime rate.
What goes into the fully loaded cost of a new operator?
Base pay plus benefits, payroll taxes, and overhead, which together usually add around 30 percent or more on top of wages. Add a one-time cost for recruiting, screening, PPE and equipment, and the training period before the new operator runs at rate.
Why include soft costs for overtime?
Because steady overtime on a floor is not free beyond the premium. Fatigue raises scrap, error, and injury rates, and burnout drives the turnover that empties more stations. Adding a soft-cost uplift makes those visible so a close call is not decided on wages alone.
Is this HR or payroll advice?
No. It is a planning estimate built on standard cost-comparison math. Calibrate the inputs to your plant and confirm overtime and wage and hour rules for your situation.

This calculator gives estimates and general business information only and is not legal or tax advice. The right choice depends on your wage rates, hiring cost, how steady the overload is, and the soft costs of overtime. Confirm specifics, including overtime and wage and hour rules, for your situation.

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