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Are Your Employees Actually Profitable? How to Analyze Labor Costs in a Service Business

You’ve got a full crew. Trucks on the road. Jobs getting done. Revenue coming in.

So why does it feel like you’re working harder than ever and keeping less?

Here’s the uncomfortable truth most service business owners avoid: having employees doesn’t automatically mean having profit. And without analyzing your true labor costs, you’re flying blind.

Let’s fix that.

The Story Nobody Talks About

Miguel runs a 6-person HVAC company in Orange County. Last year he grossed $890,000. He had three techs, a helper, an office manager, and himself running calls.

He thought he was finally making real money.

Then tax season hit. After wages, payroll taxes, workers’ comp, vehicle costs, and benefits — his actual labor burden was 68% of revenue. He was left with almost nothing.

Miguel wasn’t running a business. He was running a job for six people and barely paying himself.

This is Financial Decision Paralysis. Revenue looks good. The crew is busy. But the numbers underneath tell a different story.

What Is Labor Cost — Really?

Most service business owners track one thing: the hourly wage. That’s only part of the picture.

Your true labor cost per employee includes:

  • Base wage or salary
  • Employer payroll taxes (Social Security, Medicare, FUTA, SUTA — typically 10–15% on top of wages)
  • Workers’ compensation insurance (can be 5–20% of payroll in trades)
  • Health insurance contributions
  • Paid time off, holidays, and sick days
  • Vehicle costs (fuel, maintenance, insurance) if you’re supplying the truck
  • Tools, uniforms, and equipment
  • Training and licensing
QuickCuenta Coach Tip

If you’re only looking at the wage line on your bank statement, you’re underestimating your true labor cost by 30–50%. Pull every cost attached to that employee — not just the check you cut them.

When you add all of this up, a tech making $28/hour may actually cost you $42–$48/hour fully loaded.

If you’re billing that tech’s time at $65/hour, you’re not making $37 in margin. You’re making much less once you factor in drive time, callbacks, warranty work, and unbillable hours.

The Billable Hour Problem

Here’s a math problem that changes everything:

Your tech works 40 hours a week. How many of those are billable?

Be honest. Factor in:

  • Drive time between jobs
  • Shop time (loading, cleaning, admin)
  • No-shows and cancellations
  • Warranty callbacks
  • Slow periods and low-ticket days

Most service businesses find their techs are truly billable only 60–70% of the time. That means:

Metric Example
Weekly hours paid 40 hours
Billable efficiency 65%
Actual billable hours 26 hours / week
Fully loaded cost per hour (all-in) $45 / hour
Effective cost to produce 1 billable hour $69 / hour
What you’re billing at $75 / hour
True gross margin per billable hour $6 / hour

$6 an hour. That’s what’s left before your overhead, rent, software, marketing, or your own pay.

This is why busy service businesses go broke.

How to Calculate Labor Efficiency for Each Employee

Run this analysis on every employee quarterly. It’s not complicated but most owners never do it.

Step 1: Calculate Fully Loaded Cost

Add up all annual costs for that employee: wages, payroll taxes, workers’ comp, benefits, vehicle, and any other direct costs. Divide by 52 weeks to get weekly cost. Divide by 40 to get hourly cost.

Step 2: Track Billable vs. Non-Billable Hours

For at least 4 weeks, log actual billable hours vs. total hours paid. This gives you a real efficiency ratio. Don’t guess measure.

Step 3: Calculate the Effective Cost Per Billable Hour

Fully Loaded Hourly Cost ÷ Billable Efficiency Rate = Effective Cost Per Billable Hour

If your tech costs $44/hour all-in and runs at 68% efficiency: $44 ÷ 0.68 = $64.70 effective cost per billable hour.

Step 4: Compare to Your Billing Rate

How much are you actually charging for that work? What’s left over after that effective cost? If the margin is thin or negative you have a pricing problem, an efficiency problem, or both.

QuickCuenta Coach Tip

Don’t start with your most profitable employee. Start with your most expensive one. The truth is usually hiding there.

Labor Cost as a Percentage of Revenue: Industry Benchmarks

Here’s a rough guide for service trades in California:

Industry Healthy Range Warning Sign
HVAC / Plumbing / Electrical 28–38% Above 45%
Landscaping / Lawn Care 35–50% Above 55%
Cleaning Services 40–55% Above 60%
Painting / Drywall 30–45% Above 50%
Auto Repair / Detailing 30–40% Above 48%

These ranges are not law they’re guidance. A high-end specialty trade may run leaner. A solo operator with one helper may run higher. But if you’re consistently above the warning threshold, it’s time to look hard at your pricing and structure.

What to Do When the Numbers Don’t Work

If you run this analysis and find your labor costs are eating you alive, you have four levers:

1. Raise Your Prices

This is almost always the first and most powerful move. Most service business owners in Orange County are underpriced. If your effective cost per billable hour is $65 and you’re charging $75, you cannot survive at scale. Get to $95–$120+.

2. Improve Efficiency

Tighten your routing. Reduce drive time. Use software to schedule jobs geographically. Pre-stage truck inventory. Every unbillable hour your tech spends driving or standing around is a dollar burning.

3. Adjust Your Labor Mix

Not every job needs your highest-paid tech. Helpers, apprentices, and entry-level staff reduce your average labor cost when deployed correctly. Train up, delegate down.

4. Cut Low-Margin Services

Some jobs lose money once you run the real numbers. That $89 tune-up that takes 1.5 hours with a fully loaded tech cost of $70/hour? That’s a loss leader unless it converts. Know your numbers before you build a marketing campaign around a service.

QuickCuenta Coach Tip

You don’t need 10 employees to have a profitable service business. You need the right employees, at the right cost, doing the right work, at the right price. That clarity comes from the numbers — not from hustle.

Frequently Asked Questions

How often should I analyze my labor costs?

At minimum, quarterly. Monthly is better. If you’re growing fast or adding staff, do it every time you bring someone new on. Labor costs shift constantly a new workers’ comp rate, a wage increase, or a change in job mix can move your margins significantly.

What if I use subcontractors instead of employees?

Subcontractors simplify the math you pay a flat rate and the burden is on them. But if you’re using subs like employees (controlling their schedule, providing tools, directing their work), you may have a misclassification risk under California’s AB5 law. Talk to a professional before assuming subs are always the cheaper path.

My revenue is growing but I feel broke — is this a labor cost issue?

Often, yes. Revenue growth without margin awareness is the most common trap in service businesses. Run the analysis. The answer is almost always buried in labor, overhead, or underpriced jobs.

Can QuickCuenta help me run this analysis?

Yes. This is exactly the kind of work we do. We help service business owners in Orange County understand the real cost of their team not just the wage, but the full financial picture. Then we help you set prices that actually make sense.

The Bottom Line

Employees can make you profitable or they can quietly drain every dollar you bring in.

The difference is whether you know the numbers.

Stop guessing. Stop assuming a busy calendar means a healthy business. Run the analysis. Find out what each person on your team is actually costing you and what they’re actually generating.

That’s not accounting. That’s strategy.

Ready to know your real labor cost? Book a Free 30-Minute Financial Clarity Call — No pitch. Just numbers.   |   quickcuenta.com

 

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