Calculate sales commission with flat or tiered rates. Enter sales amount, commission percentage, and tiers to see total earnings and effective rate.
Sales commission is a performance-based compensation structure that rewards employees for generating revenue. Whether you earn a flat percentage on all sales or benefit from tiered rates that increase at higher volumes, knowing your exact commission helps with income planning and goal setting.
This calculator supports both flat-rate and simple tiered commission structures. Enter your total sales and commission rate to see earnings instantly. For tiered plans, enter a second tier threshold and rate to see how much you earn at each level.
Commission structures vary widely by industry: real estate agents typically earn 2.5–3% per side, SaaS sales reps earn 8–12% on new business, and retail workers might earn 1–5%. Understanding your effective commission rate across all sales helps you evaluate your compensation and set realistic income targets.
Quantifying this parameter enables meaningful comparison across time periods and projects, revealing trends that inform better decisions about personal productivity and resource management.
Commission earners need to forecast income accurately for budgeting and goal setting. This calculator shows exact commission at any sales level and reveals the effective rate across tiered structures. This quantitative approach replaces vague time estimates with concrete data, enabling professionals to plan realistic schedules and avoid the pattern of chronic overcommitment.
Flat: Commission = Sales × Rate Tiered: Commission = (Tier 1 Sales × Rate 1) + (Excess × Rate 2) Effective Rate = Total Commission ÷ Total Sales × 100
Result: $14,000 total commission
First $100,000 at 8%: $8,000. Next $50,000 at 12%: $6,000. Total: $14,000. Effective rate: 9.33%. Without tiers at a flat 8%, commission would be $12,000—the tiered structure rewards higher performance with $2,000 more.
The most common structures are flat-rate (same percentage on all sales), tiered/accelerator (increasing rates at higher volumes), and draw-against-commission (guaranteed minimum advanced against future earnings). Each has pros and cons for both employer and salesperson.
Work backward from your desired income: if your OTE is $150K with a 50/50 split and 10% commission rate, you need $750K in sales to hit target. Break that into monthly targets ($62.5K) and pipeline requirements (typically 3–4x pipeline coverage).
When negotiating, focus on: the commission rate, quota attainability (what % of reps hit target?), accelerators above quota, clawback policies, and payment timing. A plan with a 10% rate and achievable quota beats a 15% rate with an impossible target.
It varies by industry: SaaS sales reps earn 8–15% on new business, real estate agents earn 2.5–3% per side, insurance agents earn 5–20% on new policies, and retail workers earn 1–5%. Base salary and commission split also vary.
On-Target Earnings is the total expected compensation (base salary + commission) when a salesperson hits 100% of their quota. For example, a role with $80K base and $80K variable has an OTE of $160K with a 50/50 split.
Tiered plans pay different rates at different sales levels. For example, 8% on the first $100K and 12% above that. This rewards high performers with accelerating compensation. Some plans have 3–5 tiers with increasing rates.
A clawback reclaims commission paid on deals that later fall through (customer cancels, returns product, or fails to pay). Clawback periods typically range from 30 to 120 days. It's standard in SaaS and recurring revenue businesses.
Higher commission offers more upside but more risk. Top performers benefit from commission-heavy plans (60–70% variable). Risk-averse earners or those in unpredictable markets may prefer higher base (60–70% fixed) with lower variable.
Commission is taxed as regular income. However, employers often withhold at a higher supplemental rate (22% federal) on commission checks because they're treated as supplemental wages. You reconcile at filing time.