Severance Pay Calculator

Calculate severance pay based on years of service, weekly salary, and company policy. Estimates 1-2 weeks of pay per year of tenure plus benefits continuation.

About the Severance Pay Calculator

Severance pay is compensation provided to employees upon termination, typically calculated as a multiple of weeks of pay per year of service. While not federally mandated in the U.S. (except under the WARN Act for mass layoffs), many employers offer severance packages as part of their termination policy or negotiated separation agreements.

The most common formula is 1 to 2 weeks of pay per year of service, though senior executives and long-tenured employees may negotiate higher multiples. Severance packages often include additional components: benefits continuation (COBRA subsidies), outplacement services, accelerated vesting of equity, and garden leave provisions.

This Severance Pay Calculator estimates the gross severance amount based on your salary, years of service, and the employer's weeks-per-year multiplier. It also estimates the tax impact since severance is treated as supplemental wages and calculates the value of any benefits continuation period. Use it to evaluate a severance offer or plan for a workforce reduction.

Why Use This Severance Pay Calculator?

Severance negotiations are high-stakes events. Knowing the financial value of a severance package—including after-tax proceeds and benefits continuation—gives employees leverage in negotiations and helps HR teams model the cost of layoff scenarios accurately. Having a precise figure at your fingertips empowers better planning and more confident decisions. Manual calculations are error-prone and time-consuming; this tool delivers verified results in seconds so you can focus on strategy.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your annual salary or weekly pay.
  2. Enter your years of service (tenure).
  3. Select the weeks-per-year multiplier (1 week, 1.5 weeks, or 2 weeks per year).
  4. Enter any additional lump sum (signing bonus, unused PTO payout, etc.).
  5. Enter the number of months of benefits continuation.
  6. Enter the estimated monthly COBRA cost the employer will cover.
  7. Review gross severance, tax estimate, and total package value.

Formula

Severance Weeks = Years of Service × Weeks-per-Year Multiplier Gross Severance = Weekly Salary × Severance Weeks + Additional Lump Sum Benefits Value = Monthly COBRA Cost × Continuation Months Total Package = Gross Severance + Benefits Value

Example Calculation

Result: $26,153.84 gross severance + $5,400 benefits = $31,553.84 total

Weekly salary: $85,000 ÷ 52 = $1,634.62. Severance weeks: 8 × 2 = 16 weeks. Gross severance: $1,634.62 × 16 = $26,153.84. Benefits: $1,800 × 3 = $5,400. Total package: $31,553.84.

Tips & Best Practices

Severance Pay Structures

Companies use several approaches to severance: fixed weeks per year of service (most common), flat amounts by job level, hybrid formulas that combine a base amount with per-year increments, or negotiated amounts for senior executives. Understanding your company's standard formula gives you a baseline for negotiation.

Tax Planning for Severance

Large severance payments can push you into a higher tax bracket for the year. Consider requesting installment payments across two calendar years to smooth the tax impact. Alternatively, maximize pre-tax contributions (401k, HSA) during the severance period if your employer allows it during the transition.

WARN Act Requirements

The Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) Act requires employers with 100+ employees to provide 60 days notice before mass layoffs or plant closings. Failure to provide notice results in WARN Act pay (up to 60 days of wages and benefits) which is separate from and in addition to any voluntary severance package.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is severance pay required by law?

Federal law does not generally require severance pay. However, the WARN Act requires 60 days notice or pay in lieu for mass layoffs of 100+ employees. Some states have mini-WARN acts with lower thresholds. Many employers offer severance voluntarily or per company policy.

How is severance typically calculated?

The most common formula is 1 to 2 weeks of base pay per year of service. Some companies use a flat amount based on role level. Executive severance packages may offer 6-24 months of salary regardless of tenure. The formula is usually specified in the company's severance policy or employment agreement.

Is severance pay taxable?

Yes. Severance pay is fully taxable as ordinary income and treated as supplemental wages. Federal withholding at 22% (flat method) applies, plus FICA taxes and state income tax. The total tax impact is typically 30-40% depending on your bracket and state.

Can I negotiate a better severance package?

Yes, severance is almost always negotiable. Common negotiation points include: higher weeks-per-year multiplier, extended benefits continuation, outplacement services, positive reference letters, accelerated equity vesting, non-disparagement modifications, and non-compete scope reduction.

Does severance affect unemployment benefits?

It depends on your state and how severance is structured. Lump-sum severance payments may delay unemployment benefits in some states. Severance paid as salary continuation typically delays benefits during the continuation period. Always file for unemployment promptly regardless.

What's included in a typical severance package?

A standard package includes cash severance (weeks per year), COBRA subsidy or benefits continuation, unused PTO payout, outplacement services, and a mutual release of claims. Enhanced packages may add executive coaching, extended equity vesting, and garden leave.

How long do I have to accept a severance offer?

For employees over 40, the OWBPA requires at least 21 days to consider an individual agreement (45 days for group layoffs) and a 7-day revocation period. Younger employees may have shorter deadlines, but it's reasonable to request at least 2 weeks to review.

Can I receive severance and unemployment simultaneously?

In most states, you can receive a lump-sum severance and still collect unemployment immediately. If severance is paid as salary continuation, unemployment may be delayed until the continuation ends. Rules vary by state, so check with your local unemployment office.

Related Pages