Every manufacturer knows turnover is expensive. Most underestimate it by 2-3x because they only count costs on the recruiting invoice. Here is a step-by-step guide to calculating your actual turnover cost.
The DOL Benchmark
The U.S. Department of Labor estimates replacing a single worker costs 30% of annual salary. For a production worker at $18 per hour ($37,440 per year): $11,232 per departure.
Step 1: Direct Replacement Costs
Agency fees, background checks, drug screens, onboarding administration. Typical range: $500-$2,000 per replacement.
Step 2: Training and Ramp Costs
Safety and orientation training hours, on-the-job training during reduced-productivity ramp, supervisor time, quality defect costs during ramp. Typical range: $1,500-$4,000 per replacement.
Step 3: Vacancy Cost
Lost throughput during unfilled vacancy, overtime premium to cover vacant shifts, missed production quotas. Typical range: $2,000-$6,000 per vacancy event.
Total
Fully-loaded replacement cost for a production worker at $18 per hour: $7,500 to $15,000 per departure. On a 100-person line at 376% turnover: $4.2 million annually.
What Workforce Mobility Changes
92% retention on a 100-person line produces approximately 8 replacement events per year instead of 376. The difference: approximately $3.9 million in annual replacement cost avoided before accounting for supervisor bandwidth, quality improvement, or safety outcomes. TalentMovers offers a free, structured turnover cost analysis for your specific operation. Schedule yours at talentmovers.com.