Payroll Cost Ratio in Hospitality: Formula, Benchmarks & Calculator

The payroll cost ratio relates total staff costs — gross wages including employer social-security contributions, supplements and casual staff — to net revenue. Alongside the cost-of-goods ratio, it is the most important cost KPI in hospitality: together they determine whether anything is left at the bottom line (prime cost).

Formula & benchmarks

Payroll cost ratio (%) = total staff costs ÷ net revenue × 100
Business typeTypical corridor
Restaurants (food-led)30 – 38%
Hotels overall (with F&B)33 – 45%
B&B / rooms-led hotels25 – 35%
System catering22 – 30%

Benchmarks, strongly dependent on concept, opening hours, collective agreements and region. Prime-cost rule of thumb: cost-of-goods + payroll ratio should stay below ~65% combined, otherwise rent, energy and profit get squeezed.

Interactive: your ratio in 10 seconds

Payroll ratio calculator

Enter monthly or annual figures — just use the same period.

35.0%payroll cost ratio
65.0%prime cost (payroll + goods)
35.0%left for rent, energy, profit

Prime cost at the limit — re-cost the menu or raise productivity per shift.

Lowering the ratio — without sacrificing service quality

Frequently asked questions

Does the owner's salary belong in staff costs?

For internal steering: yes, include it as an imputed cost — otherwise a working owner family flatters the ratio and the business is worth less than assumed.

Calculate monthly or annually?

Both: monthly for steering (seasonality!), annually for benchmarking. Spread one-off payments such as holiday bonuses across the year.

Is a low ratio always good?

No — permanent understaffing costs service quality, reviews and ultimately revenue. The ratio is a steering tool, not a race to the bottom.

Related terms

Staff costs under control — without cutting service?
We analyse productivity, rosters and processes.
Get in touch →