Employee Turnover Calculator

Calculate your employee turnover rate instantly. Compare against industry benchmarks and get actionable retention insights.

✓ 100% Free ✓ No Signup ✓ Instant Results ✓ Industry Benchmarks

Enter Headcount Data

All fields in the same time period (month / quarter / year).

Headcount on day 1 of your measurement period.

Include voluntary (resignations) + involuntary (terminations, layoffs).

📊

Enter your headcount data
to see your turnover rate
and benchmark comparison.

Turnover Rate

0.00%

Within normal range

Avg Employees

Retention Rate

Annualised Rate

Headcount Change

Industry Benchmark

Results are estimates for informational purposes only.

How Turnover Rate Is Calculated

Turnover Rate (%) = Number of Separations Average Number of Employees × 100

Where:

  • Separations = Employees who left during the period (voluntary + involuntary)
  • Average Employees = (Beginning headcount + Ending headcount) ÷ 2
  • Retention Rate = 100% − Turnover Rate
  • Annualised Rate = Monthly Rate × 12, or Quarterly × 4

Worked Example

A company starts January with 100 employees and ends December with 110 employees. During the year, 15 employees left.

Average Employees = (100 + 110) / 2 = 105

Turnover Rate = (15 / 105) × 100 = 14.29%

Retention Rate = 100 − 14.29 = 85.71%

14.29% is within the average range for most industries.

Industry Turnover Benchmarks (Annual)

IndustryLowAverageHigh
Technology / Software10%13%18%
Healthcare15%20%27%
Retail40%60%100%
Hospitality & Food Service70%90%130%
Finance & Banking10%14%20%
Manufacturing15%22%30%
Education10%15%22%
Construction18%25%35%
Professional Services10%14%20%

Benchmarks are annual rates based on U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data and industry reports. Individual company results may vary.

4 Steps to Your Turnover Rate

01

Enter starting headcount

Number of employees at the beginning of your measurement period (day 1).

02

Enter ending headcount

Total employees at the end of the period, including new hires who joined.

03

Enter separations

All employees who left — resignations, terminations, retirements, and layoffs combined.

04

Select period & industry

Choose monthly, quarterly, or annual. Pick your industry for accurate benchmark comparison.

Common Questions

What is employee turnover rate? +

Employee turnover rate is the percentage of employees who leave an organization during a specific period, relative to the average number of employees during that time. It is a key HR metric used to measure workforce stability, hiring efficiency, and organizational health.

How is turnover rate calculated? +

Turnover Rate = (Number of Separations ÷ Average Number of Employees) × 100. Average employees = (Beginning headcount + Ending headcount) ÷ 2. This calculator automatically handles the formula and annualisation for monthly or quarterly periods.

What is a good employee turnover rate? +

A "good" rate depends heavily on your industry. Generally, 10–15% annual turnover is considered healthy for most white-collar industries. Retail and hospitality typically see 50–100%+ and that can still be normal for those sectors. Compare against our industry benchmarks for context.

Should I include voluntary and involuntary separations? +

Yes — for overall turnover, include both voluntary (quits, resignations) and involuntary (terminations, layoffs, retirements). For deeper analysis, calculate them separately. Voluntary turnover is often more actionable as it reflects employee sentiment and retention issues.

What is the difference between turnover and attrition? +

Turnover typically implies that leaving employees are replaced with new hires, maintaining headcount. Attrition often refers to a natural, gradual workforce reduction without backfilling positions. Both are calculated using the same formula, but they carry different strategic implications.

How often should I calculate turnover? +

Most companies calculate monthly for trend monitoring and annually for benchmarking. Monthly tracking helps spot sudden spikes early — such as after a management change or restructuring. Annual figures are most useful when comparing against industry data.

How can I reduce employee turnover? +

Focus on: competitive compensation and benefits, clear career development paths, strong management training, work-life balance initiatives, regular employee feedback and engagement surveys, and meaningful recognition programs. Exit interviews help identify the root causes specific to your organisation.

What does the "annualised" rate mean? +

If you calculate for a partial period (monthly or quarterly), the annualised rate projects what your full-year turnover would be at the current pace — making it comparable with industry annual benchmarks. Monthly rate × 12 = annualised; quarterly rate × 4 = annualised.