Calculate the fully loaded labor hour rate including wages, benefits, training, and PPE divided by productive hours per year.
The labor hour rate represents the true cost of one productive hour of labor, encompassing not just base wages but also benefits, training expenses, and personal protective equipment (PPE). In manufacturing, the difference between the base wage and the fully loaded rate is substantial — often 35-50% higher — making it essential to use the loaded rate for accurate product costing.
Productive hours exclude time spent on breaks, holidays, vacation, sick leave, training, and other non-productive activities. A worker paid for 2,080 hours per year (40 hours × 52 weeks) may only deliver 1,700-1,800 productive hours after these deductions. Dividing total labor costs by productive hours — not paid hours — gives the true cost of each hour actually spent on production.
This calculator sums annual wages, benefits, training, and PPE costs, then divides by productive hours to compute the fully loaded labor hour rate. Use it for job costing, quoting, and comparing the cost of labor across departments or facilities.
The loaded labor hour rate captures the full cost of having a worker available for production. Using base wages alone understates labor cost by 35-50%, leading to under-priced quotes and overstated margins. Precise quantification supports benchmarking against industry standards and internal targets, driving accountability and continuous improvement throughout the organization.
LH Rate = (Wages + Benefits + Training + PPE) / Productive Hours Productive Hours = Paid Hours − Vacation − Holidays − Sick − Breaks − Training Time
Result: $36.23 per productive hour
Total costs = $45,760 + $16,000 + $1,200 + $800 = $63,760. With 1,760 productive hours, the loaded rate = $63,760 / 1,760 = $36.23/hr compared to a base wage of $22.00/hr.
A common mistake is dividing total labor costs by 2,080 paid hours. This understates the hourly rate because those 2,080 hours include vacation, holidays, sick days, and paid breaks. A more realistic denominator of 1,750-1,800 productive hours yields a rate that accurately reflects the cost of time actually spent on production work.
Labor-intensive operations use the labor hour rate as the primary basis for job costing and overhead allocation. Machine-intensive operations rely more on machine hour rates. Many shops use both — labor hour rates for assembly and machine hour rates for machining — to accurately capture the cost structure of each operation.
Labor hour rates vary dramatically by geography. A loaded rate in the rural Midwest might be $30-40/hr, while the same skill level in a coastal metro area could be $50-65/hr. Benefits costs, state taxes, and workers' compensation rates all contribute to regional differences.
The base rate is the hourly wage paid to the employee. The loaded rate adds all employer costs — benefits, taxes, training, PPE — and divides by productive (not paid) hours. The loaded rate reflects the true cost per productive hour.
Start with 2,080 annual paid hours (40 hrs × 52 weeks). Subtract vacation (80-120 hrs), holidays (80 hrs), sick time (40 hrs), breaks (250 hrs), and training (20-40 hrs). Typical productive hours range from 1,700-1,800 per year.
The base labor hour rate uses regular-time costs and hours. Overtime should be costed at the overtime rate (1.5×) when it occurs. Some companies calculate a blended rate that includes expected overtime if it's a regular occurrence.
No. Different skill levels command different wages and may require different PPE. Experienced CNC machinists have a higher loaded rate than entry-level assemblers. Separate rates by labor grade for more accurate costing.
When evaluating whether to make a part internally or buy it from a supplier, use the loaded labor hour rate — not the base wage — to estimate internal labor cost. Using the base wage makes internal production look cheaper than it really is.
Benefits loading typically adds 30-45% to base wages in U.S. manufacturing. Companies with strong union contracts or generous benefits may see 50% or higher. The BLS reports total compensation is approximately 1.4× wages for manufacturing workers.