# Labor Cost % by Industry: Healthcare 41%, Retail 10% (2026)
Healthcare spends 41% of revenue on labor. Retail: just 10-20%. Full breakdown by industry with formulas, benchmarks, and tips to get your number right.
Source: https://turnozo.com/blog/labor-cost-percentage-by-industry
Published: 2026-03-24
Updated: 2026-05-20
Category: industry
Tags: statistics, labor-costs, data, small-business, workforce-management
Labor is the biggest line item on most businesses' P&L. But "too high" and "too low" mean completely different things depending on whether you run a hair salon or a warehouse.

This page breaks down labor cost as a percentage of revenue by industry, with sourced benchmarks. Use it to figure out where you actually stand, not where you think you stand.

---

## The formula

Before comparing yourself to industry averages, make sure you're calculating the same thing:

**Labor cost percentage = (Total labor costs / Gross revenue) x 100**

Total labor costs include:

- Wages and salaries
- Payroll taxes (employer share)
- Health insurance and benefits
- Bonuses and commissions
- Paid time off
- Workers' comp insurance

Don't include: rent, inventory, utilities, or marketing spend. Those are overhead, not labor.

> **TIP:**
> Use the last 3-6 months of data, not a single month. Seasonal swings in
>   staffing and revenue will distort the picture. Monthly snapshots are useful
>   for trending, but the comparison benchmark should be a rolling average.

**Example:** A restaurant pays $120,000 in total labor costs and brings in $400,000 in revenue. Labor cost percentage = ($120,000 / $400,000) x 100 = **30%**.

---

## Labor cost percentage by industry

Here's where the numbers get real. These benchmarks come from BLS data, industry associations, and compensation research.

| Industry                  | Labor Cost (% of Revenue) | Why                                                               |
| ------------------------- | ------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Retail**                | 8-20%                     | High sales volume, heavy part-time labor, thin margins            |
| **Manufacturing**         | 12-30%                    | Mix of automation and skilled labor; varies by product complexity |
| **Construction**          | ~20%                      | Project-based; labor costs tied directly to crew size             |
| **Technology**            | 20-30%                    | Engineering-heavy before scale; shrinks with revenue growth       |
| **Restaurants**           | 25-35%                    | Labor-intensive, high turnover, slim margins                      |
| **Hospitality (hotels)**  | ~30%                      | Service-heavy, seasonal staffing swings                           |
| **Professional services** | ~39%                      | Revenue is literally employee expertise                           |
| **Healthcare**            | ~41%                      | Specialized staff, can't automate patient care                    |
| **Beauty salons**         | ~44%                      | Revenue depends entirely on stylist productivity                  |

_Sources: [NetSuite](https://www.netsuite.com/portal/resource/articles/financial-management/small-business-payroll-percentage.shtml); [Paytronix](https://www.paytronix.com/blog/what-percentage-of-revenue-should-payroll-be); [National Restaurant Association, 2025 Operations Data Abstract](https://restaurant.org/research-and-media/research/restaurant-economic-insights/analysis-commentary/elevated-labor-costs-had-a-significant-impact-on-restaurant-profitability-in-2024/); [BLS Employer Costs for Employee Compensation, March 2026](https://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/ecec.pdf)_

The pattern is straightforward: the more your business depends on people doing the work (vs. products, automation, or scale), the higher your labor cost percentage. The scheduling layer matters here too: the [employee scheduling statistics](/blog/employee-scheduling-statistics) page shows why rota work feeds straight into overtime, absence cover, and payroll accuracy.

---

## Restaurant labor costs: the tightest margins

Restaurants deserve their own section because the margins are razor-thin and labor is half the equation.

The National Restaurant Association's 2025 Operations Data Abstract (based on 900+ operators nationwide) found:

- **Full-service restaurants:** median labor cost of **36.5%** of sales
- Full-service restaurants that turned a **profit:** median of **34.2%**
- Full-service restaurants that reported a **loss:** median of **42.9%**
- **Limited-service (fast food, counter service):** median of **31.7%**
- Limited-service restaurants that turned a **profit:** median of **30.0%**
- Limited-service restaurants that reported a **loss:** median of **34.1%**

The difference between profit and loss? About 6 percentage points of labor cost. That's the gap between running a tight ship and bleeding money.

_Source: [National Restaurant Association, 2025 Operations Data Abstract](https://restaurant.org/research-and-media/research/restaurant-economic-insights/analysis-commentary/elevated-labor-costs-had-a-significant-impact-on-restaurant-profitability-in-2024/)_

For more on restaurant-specific staffing, see our [restaurant staffing statistics](/blog/restaurant-staffing-statistics), [overtime statistics](/blog/overtime-statistics), and [scheduling guide](/blog/restaurant-staff-scheduling-guide).

---

## Calculate your labor cost percentage

> **Calculator: Labor Cost Percentage Calculator:** Interactive element available in the full article.

---

## What drives your labor cost percentage up

Your number might be high. That doesn't automatically mean you're doing something wrong. But it's worth checking whether any of these are pushing you above your industry average:

### 1. Overtime creep

Overtime hours cost 1.5x regular pay. A few extra hours per employee per week compounds fast. If you're regularly scheduling overtime instead of hiring, you might be spending more than you'd think. See our [overtime cost calculator](/blog/how-to-calculate-overtime-costs) to check the math.

### 2. Overstaffing during slow periods

Having 8 people on the floor when you only need 5 is the fastest way to inflate labor costs. This is especially common in retail and restaurants where foot traffic fluctuates throughout the day.

### 3. High turnover

Every time someone quits, you pay to recruit, hire, and train their replacement. [Turnover costs 50-200% of annual salary](/blog/employee-turnover-cost) depending on the role. That cost shows up in your labor percentage even though it's not productive labor.

### 4. Inefficient scheduling

Manual scheduling (spreadsheets, group chats, paper) leads to coverage gaps, double-bookings, and last-minute scrambles. Each of those errors has a labor cost attached to it. See our piece on [the real cost of manual scheduling](/blog/real-cost-of-manual-scheduling).

### 5. Benefits and compliance costs

Healthcare premiums, workers' comp, and payroll taxes are rising. BLS reports total employer compensation costs averaged $46.84 per hour worked in December 2025, with benefits accounting for 29.3% of total compensation.
_Source: [BLS Employer Costs for Employee Compensation](https://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/ecec.pdf)_

---

## What drives your labor cost percentage down

A lower number isn't always better. It might mean you're understaffed, underpaying, or about to face a retention crisis. But when the reduction comes from genuine efficiency, it's pure margin.

### Scheduling to actual demand

Matching staffing levels to customer traffic, production targets, or appointment volumes. Not guessing. Not "this is what we always do." Data-driven scheduling cuts waste without cutting service quality.

### Cross-training employees

When every team member can cover multiple roles, you need fewer people on each shift. A cashier who can also stock shelves. A server who can also host. Flexibility = fewer bodies needed at any given moment.

### Reducing no-shows and callouts

Every [no-show](/blog/employee-no-show-statistics) means either paying someone overtime to cover or running understaffed (which costs you in service quality and revenue). Predictable scheduling and better communication reduce both.

### Automating admin work

Time cards, schedule building, timesheet approvals. If these are manual, someone is spending hours every week on tasks that could take minutes. That's labor cost with zero customer-facing output.

> **Turnozo CTA:**
> Turnozo automates scheduling, time tracking, and timesheets. Free for up to 10
>   employees.

---

## Labor cost vs. labor margin

Labor cost percentage tells you how much labor costs. Labor margin tells you how much money that labor makes.

**Labor margin = (Revenue - Direct labor costs) / Revenue x 100**

If your restaurant brings in $400,000 and spends $120,000 on labor, your labor margin is 70%. That's the gross profit generated by every dollar of labor.

Both metrics matter. A 30% labor cost percentage might be fine if your labor margin is 70%. But if your revenue drops and that same $120,000 payroll pushes your labor cost to 40%, you have a problem.

The labor margin perspective is especially useful for:

- **Pricing decisions:** Is each service/product generating enough to justify its labor cost?
- **Staffing decisions:** Will adding one more person generate enough incremental revenue?
- **Seasonal planning:** When revenue dips, which shifts or roles still justify their cost?

---

## How to track and improve your labor cost percentage

### Step 1: Calculate your current number

Use the formula above with your last 3-6 months of data. One month isn't enough because seasonal swings will distort the picture.

### Step 2: Compare to your industry

Use the table above. If you're within the normal range, focus on incremental improvements. If you're significantly above it, dig into why.

### Step 3: Find the leaks

Walk through each one with real numbers:

**Overtime.** Say you have 3 employees averaging 5 overtime hours per week at $18/hour. That's 3 x 5 x $9 (overtime premium) x 52 = $7,020/year in avoidable premium pay. If you could cover those hours with a part-time hire or better shift distribution, that money goes straight back to your margin.

**Turnover.** Every time someone leaves, you spend on job postings, interviews, onboarding, and reduced productivity while the new hire ramps up. For a $30,000/year role, that's [$15,000-$60,000 in replacement costs](/blog/employee-turnover-cost). If you're losing 3 people a year, that's $45,000-$180,000 that shows up in your labor cost but produces zero output.

**Dead time.** Count the hours when employees are clocked in with nothing to do. A restaurant with 8 staff during a 2-hour afternoon lull at $15/hour is burning $240/day in unproductive labor. That's $87,600/year. Stagger shifts to match traffic patterns.

**Admin overhead.** If a manager spends 5 hours per week building schedules in a spreadsheet, that's 260 hours/year. At $25/hour, that's $6,500/year on a task that scheduling software handles in minutes.

### Step 4: Fix the root cause

Most of these leaks trace back to scheduling. Overstaffing, overtime, coverage gaps, and no-shows are all scheduling problems wearing different hats.

The fix isn't cutting staff. It's matching the right number of people to the right hours. For the full playbook, see our guide on [how to reduce labor costs without cutting staff](/blog/reduce-labor-costs-without-cutting-staff).

---

## The BLS numbers: what employers actually pay

The Bureau of Labor Statistics tracks employer costs for employee compensation (ECEC). Here's what US employers paid per hour worked in December 2025:

| Industry                      | Total Compensation/Hour | Wages/Hour | Benefits/Hour |
| ----------------------------- | ----------------------- | ---------- | ------------- |
| **All private industry**      | $46.84                  | $33.11     | $13.73        |
| **Retail trade**              | $26.41                  | $19.64     | $6.77         |
| **Leisure and hospitality**   | $23.22                  | $17.69     | $5.53         |
| **Education and health**      | $54.26                  | $36.07     | $18.19        |
| **Professional and business** | $58.25                  | $42.15     | $16.10        |

_Source: [BLS Employer Costs for Employee Compensation, March 2026](https://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/ecec.pdf)_

Benefits add 25-35% on top of wages depending on the industry. When calculating your labor cost percentage, you need the full loaded cost, not just the hourly rate on the paycheck.

---

## The bottom line

There's no universal "right" labor cost percentage. A salon at 44% can be profitable. A restaurant at 35% can be hemorrhaging money. The number only means something in context: your industry, your business model, your growth stage.

What matters is knowing your number, knowing your industry's number, and closing the gap when it's too wide. For most small teams, that starts with scheduling.

> **Turnozo CTA:**
> Turnozo helps small teams schedule smarter and track hours automatically. Free
>   for up to 10 employees.
