Cost Per Hire (CPH) is a human resources and talent acquisition metric that measures the total expenditure incurred by an organisation to successfully recruit and onboard a new employee. It encompasses all direct and indirect costs associated with the hiring process — from job advertising and recruiter fees through to background checks, onboarding materials, and the productive time invested by hiring managers and interviewers. Cost Per Hire is one of the most widely tracked recruitment efficiency metrics and is used to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of talent acquisition strategies, benchmark performance against industry peers, and build the business case for investments in employer brand, recruitment technology, and employee referral programmes.
While Cost Per Hire is a useful operational metric, it must always be interpreted alongside quality metrics — particularly Quality of Hire and first-year retention rate — to avoid optimising for low cost at the expense of hiring quality. A company that dramatically reduces its Cost Per Hire by eliminating recruiter support and relying on low-quality job boards may appear more efficient on paper while consistently hiring lower-performing candidates whose underperformance, short tenure, and eventual replacement cost far exceeds the savings achieved. The goal is not the lowest possible Cost Per Hire but the most cost-effective hiring process that consistently delivers high-quality outcomes.
Formula
Example
| Cost Component | Value |
|---|---|
|
Internal recruiter salaries (allocated to hiring)
|
$80,000
|
|
Job board advertising and LinkedIn Recruiter licences
|
$15,000
|
|
External agency / headhunter fees
|
$30,000
|
|
Background checks and assessments
|
$5,000
|
|
Hiring manager and interviewer time (opportunity cost)
|
$10,000
|
|
Onboarding materials and training
|
$8,000
|
|
Total Recruitment Costs
|
$148,000
|
|
Total hires in the period
|
40
|
|
Cost Per Hire
|
$148,000 ÷ 40 = $3,700
|
Components of Cost Per Hire
Cost Per Hire is built from two broad categories of costs — internal and external — each of which contains multiple line items that vary significantly by organisation size, hiring model, and role type.
Internal Costs
Internal costs are those incurred within the organisation — the people, systems, and processes that the talent acquisition function deploys to find and hire candidates. They are often underestimated because they are largely absorbed into existing salary and overhead budgets rather than appearing as discrete recruitment line items.
| Internal Cost Component | Description |
|---|---|
|
Recruiter Salaries and Benefits
|
Proportion of internal recruiter compensation attributable to each hire; the largest single internal cost in most organisations
|
|
HR Technology
|
ATS licences, HRIS integration costs, video interviewing platforms, and recruitment analytics tools allocated per hire
|
|
Hiring Manager Time
|
Hours spent reviewing CVs, conducting interviews, and deliberating hiring decisions, valued at the hiring manager’s hourly cost
|
|
Interviewer Time
|
Cumulative time cost of all employees involved in panel interviews, technical assessments, and debrief sessions
|
|
Onboarding and Training
|
Internal facilitator time, onboarding programme costs, IT setup, and the productivity cost of trainer time during induction
|
|
Administrative Overhead
|
Offer letter preparation, contract management, background check coordination, and HR administration time
|
External Costs
External costs are direct cash expenditures made to third parties in the course of attracting, assessing, and hiring candidates. They are more visible than internal costs because they appear as discrete budget line items, but they typically represent only a portion of the true total Cost Per Hire.
| External Cost Component | Description |
|---|---|
|
Job Board Advertising
|
|
|
Recruiter Licences
|
|
|
Agency / Headhunter Fees
|
Contingency or retained search fees; typically 15–30% of first-year base salary for the placed candidate
|
|
Background Checks
|
Criminal history, employment verification, reference checks, credit checks, and security clearance costs
|
|
Psychometric and Skills Assessments
|
|
|
Candidate Travel and Expenses
|
Interview travel reimbursement, relocation assistance, and candidate accommodation costs
|
|
Employer Branding Investment
|
Careers page development, employer brand campaigns, and Glassdoor profile management allocated per hire
|
|
Employee Referral Bonuses
|
Cash bonuses paid to employees who refer successfully hired candidates
|
Industry Benchmarks
| Industry / Organisation Type | Typical Cost Per Hire | Notes |
|---|---|---|
|
Technology / SaaS
|
$4,000 – $10,000+
|
Competitive market; high use of LinkedIn Recruiter and agency support for specialist roles
|
|
Financial Services
|
$3,500 – $8,000
|
Compliance screening and background checks add cost; executive roles are significantly higher
|
|
Healthcare (clinical)
|
$3,000 – $7,000
|
Credential verification and licensing checks add to standard recruitment costs
|
|
Retail / Hospitality (frontline)
|
$500 – $2,000
|
High volume, lower complexity; strong use of job boards and referrals
|
|
Manufacturing / Operations
|
$2,000 – $5,000
|
Wide variance by role type; skilled trade roles cost more than general labour
|
|
Professional Services
|
$5,000 – $15,000
|
|
|
Executive / C-Suite (retained search)
|
$20,000 – $100,000+
|
Retained executive search fees alone typically represent 25–35% of first-year total compensation
|
Source: Benchmarks derived from SHRM Talent Acquisition Benchmarking Reports, LinkedIn Talent Insights, and industry surveys. SHRM’s benchmark for average Cost Per Hire across all industries in the United States is approximately $4,700, though this varies significantly by role complexity and organisational size.
Cost Per Hire by Recruitment Channel
Different recruitment channels deliver significantly different Cost Per Hire outcomes. Understanding channel-level cost efficiency — combined with quality of hire data — enables talent acquisition teams to allocate recruitment budgets toward the channels that deliver the best combination of cost, speed, and candidate quality.
| Recruitment Channel | Relative Cost Per Hire | Notes |
|---|---|---|
|
Employee Referrals
|
Very Low
|
Typically the lowest Cost Per Hire channel; referred candidates also tend to have higher quality and retention rates
|
|
Careers Page / Organic Search
|
Very Low
|
No direct variable cost per application; investment is in employer brand and SEO rather than per-vacancy spend
|
|
Job Boards (Indeed, SEEK, etc.)
|
Low to Medium
|
Cost-per-click or flat posting fees; effective for high-volume roles but quality varies widely
|
|
LinkedIn Recruiter (Direct Sourcing)
|
Medium
|
Licence cost plus recruiter time; highly effective for specialist and senior roles
|
|
Social Media and Programmatic
|
Low to Medium
|
Targeted advertising on LinkedIn, Facebook, and programmatic platforms; cost depends on audience competition
|
|
University / Graduate Programmes
|
Medium
|
Event attendance, campus relationship management, and assessment centre costs; volume offsets per-hire cost
|
|
Contingency Agency
|
High
|
15–25% of first-year salary per placement; justified for hard-to-fill or time-critical roles
|
|
Retained Executive Search
|
Very High
|
25–35% of total first-year compensation; appropriate for C-suite and highly specialised senior roles
|
Strategies to Reduce Cost Per Hire
1. Build a Strong Employee Referral Programme
Employee referral programmes consistently deliver the lowest Cost Per Hire of any recruitment channel while simultaneously producing above-average Quality of Hire and retention outcomes. Referred candidates are pre-screened by the referring employee, arrive with a realistic understanding of the role and culture, and integrate more quickly into the team. Investing in a structured, well-incentivised referral programme — with clear referral bonuses, timely payment, and regular communication about open roles — typically produces a 20–40% reduction in average Cost Per Hire for roles where referrals are successfully generated.
2. Invest in Employer Brand
A strong employer brand reduces Cost Per Hire by increasing the volume of inbound applications from qualified candidates who seek out the organisation rather than needing to be expensively recruited. Companies with recognised, differentiated employer brands — built through Glassdoor management, LinkedIn presence, employee advocacy, careers page content, and award recognition — attract more applications per role, reduce dependence on external agencies, and can hire from a larger and higher-quality candidate pool at lower per-hire cost.
3. Reduce Agency Dependency
External recruitment agency fees are typically the largest single external cost driver in Cost Per Hire. Building internal sourcing capability — through LinkedIn Recruiter licences, direct outreach training for internal recruiters, and talent pipeline development — reduces the proportion of hires made through agencies and replaces their 15–25% success fees with the fixed costs of internal recruiter capacity, which is significantly cheaper at sufficient hiring volume. This transition typically requires a 12–18 month investment horizon before the Cost Per Hire benefit is fully realised.
4. Implement Recruitment Technology
Modern ATS platforms, AI-powered candidate screening tools, and automated interview scheduling systems reduce the labour intensity of the recruitment process — allowing each internal recruiter to handle a higher hiring volume at lower cost per hire. While the upfront investment in recruitment technology is significant, the reduction in recruiter time per hire and the elimination of administrative bottlenecks typically generates a strong ROI at scale. Platforms such as Greenhouse, Lever, and Workday are widely used by mid-to-large organisations for this purpose.
5. Reduce Time to Hire
Time to Hire and Cost Per Hire are directly linked — a longer hiring process consumes more recruiter time, more interviewer hours, and more administrative resource per hire, while simultaneously increasing the vacancy cost the organisation absorbs during the unfilled period. Reducing Time to Hire through streamlined interview stages, faster hiring manager feedback loops, and automated administrative workflows simultaneously reduces cost per hire and improves candidate experience.
Cost Per Hire vs. Total Cost of Workforce Acquisition
Cost Per Hire measures only the cost of recruiting and onboarding a new employee — it does not capture the full financial impact of a hiring decision over the employee’s tenure. The Total Cost of Workforce Acquisition extends Cost Per Hire to include the productivity ramp-up cost during the new hire’s adjustment period, the total compensation cost over the anticipated employment tenure, and the replacement cost if the hire does not work out and the role must be filled again. This broader framework is used in strategic workforce planning to evaluate the true return on talent investment rather than the narrow efficiency of the recruitment process alone.
Cost Per Hire in Financial and Investor Analysis
For investors evaluating labour-intensive or high-growth businesses — particularly technology companies, professional services firms, and consumer businesses scaling their workforces rapidly — Cost Per Hire is a component of human capital efficiency analysis. Companies with lower Cost Per Hire relative to peers can scale headcount more cost-effectively, converting revenue growth into workforce expansion with less friction and at lower unit cost. In high-growth phases where headcount must double or triple over short periods, Cost Per Hire efficiency can represent a material difference in the total investment required to staff the business at scale.
Cost Per Hire also features increasingly in ESG and Human Capital Management (HCM) disclosures, where it is used alongside Employee Turnover Rate, Time to Hire, and training investment per employee to paint a picture of workforce management quality. Organisations with lower Cost Per Hire driven by strong employer brand and referral programmes — rather than simply by cutting corners on assessment quality — signal a genuine talent market advantage that supports long-term competitive positioning.
| Signal | Investor Interpretation |
|---|---|
|
Low CPH with high Quality of Hire and retention
|
Positive: strong employer brand and talent strategy; efficient and effective hiring
|
|
Low CPH with high first-year turnover
|
Caution: cutting costs at the expense of quality; total cost including replacement is higher than reported
|
|
Rising CPH with flat hiring volume
|
Negative: increasing agency dependency or talent market competition eroding recruitment efficiency
|
|
Falling CPH driven by referral programme growth
|
Positive: maturing talent culture; organic talent attraction reducing paid acquisition costs
|
Related Terms
- Time to Hire — Days from candidate entering the pipeline to offer acceptance; directly affects Cost Per Hire through recruiter time and vacancy cost
- Time to Fill — Days from requisition opening to offer acceptance; the broader measure of hiring cycle duration
- Quality of Hire — Composite measure of new hire performance, manager satisfaction, and retention; the outcome metric that must be balanced against Cost Per Hire
- Employee Turnover Rate — Rate at which employees leave; high turnover multiplies total annual recruitment spend and effective Cost Per Hire
- Offer Acceptance Rate — Percentage of offers accepted; low acceptance rates inflate Cost Per Hire by increasing the number of candidates processed per successful hire
- Employer Brand — Organisation’s reputation as an employer; strong employer brand reduces Cost Per Hire through higher inbound application volume and quality
- Employee Referral Rate — Percentage of hires sourced through employee referrals; higher referral rates are associated with lower Cost Per Hire and higher retention
- Recruiter Productivity — Number of hires per recruiter per period; higher productivity reduces the internal cost component of Cost Per Hire
- Applicant Tracking System (ATS) — Software platform for managing recruitment workflows; automation reduces recruiter time per hire and lowers internal costs
- Human Capital ROI — Broader measure of financial return on workforce investment; Cost Per Hire is one input into total human capital cost
External Resources
- SHRM — Benchmarking Cost Per Hire
- LinkedIn Talent Blog — Cost Per Hire Metrics and Benchmarks
- Glassdoor Research — Understanding Cost Per Hire
- ERE — Cost Per Hire:
 The Definitive Guide - McKinsey & Company — Talent Acquisition Excellence
Disclaimer
The information provided on this page is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or human resources advice. Cost Per Hire benchmarks and methodologies are generalised and may not reflect the specific circumstances of any individual company, industry, or labour market. Always consult qualified human resources, talent acquisition, and financial advisors before making workforce investment decisions based on Cost Per Hire analysis.