Payroll Per Employee

Brief definition

Payroll per employee is a comparative figure that relates the cost or price of payroll to the number of employees being paid.

The key figure only becomes meaningful when complexity, special cases, and process quality are also considered.

The question „What does payroll cost per employee?“ is understandable – it's quick, comparable, and fits any budget sheet. In practice, however, it is often misinterpreted because two companies with the same number of employees can have a completely different payroll effort.

Closely linked duties and concepts: SV reporting procedure, ELStAM, Contribution certificate.

Why the Key Figure is Often Misleading

„Per employee“ sounds objective – in reality, it's an average figure. It obscures differences that are crucial in everyday payroll:

  • Complexity of the pay structure: Many variable components instead of a pure fixed salary
  • Process Quality: Punctual data delivery vs. late late submissions
  • Special cases Entry/Exit, Health Insurance Change, Interruptions
  • Administrative and documentation workload: Authorisations, Proofs, Archive

Motto

Staff numbers explain the volume. Complexity and process discipline usually explain the effort.

What comparable models are available?

2) Price per employee per month

The classic: a fixed amount per billed person and month. Advantage: easy to calculate and budget for.

Restriction

Many Types of remuneration, Frequent changes or multiple rounds of revisions can significantly increase the effort required – regardless of the number of employees.

2) Flat rates per process module

Here, services are priced separately, e.g. standard billing, corrections, certificates, special billing. Advantage: Service and price are more clearly linked.

3) Internal full costs (time × internal hourly rate)

For internal comparisons, full cost accounting is useful. It only works if times are recorded realistically and indirect costs (cover, coordination, updates) are included.

The real cost drivers behind „per employee“

Fee structure

  • numerous variable components (allowances, bonuses, one-off payments)
  • Benefits in kind and special provisions subject to documentation requirements
  • Industry-specific characteristics (e.g. shift work models)

Master Data and Change Dynamics

  • frequent contract changes
  • high staff turnover, with many people joining and leaving
  • Changes to health insurance providers or status attributes

Data flow & Deadlines

  • Late reporting of working hours/absences
  • Late registrations after the billing run
  • unclear responsibilities (who delivers, who checks, who approves)

Reporting and documentation requirements

Part of the effort is tied up in mandatory processes that need to run smoothly regardless of the pricing model – particularly in SV reporting procedure, in the processing of ELStAM-characteristics and in Contribution records.

Practice: How to fairly compare quotes and internal costs

For a fair comparison, you should supplement the question „What does it cost per employee?“ with three additional questions:

  1. What is included as standard? What evaluations, reports, queries, confirmations?
  2. How is complexity represented? Are there surcharges for special cases or many remuneration components?
  3. How stable is the process? Deadlines, data quality, approval – how often do corrections arise?

Key performance indicators that say more than „price per employee“

  • Number Proofread per month
  • Number Late registrations after the cut-off date
  • Share variable pay components
  • Average Wastewater treatment cases (Queries) per billing run

Recommendation

Record these key figures for three months. You will then quickly see whether „per employee“ is actually a suitable benchmark for your organisation.

Typical logical fallacies

„We only have 30 employees – that's not many.“

A small team can be more complex than a large one – for example, if it involves a lot of overtime, variable working hours, multiple sites or high staff turnover.

2) Corrections are not counted as costs

Corrections take up time: new analyses, new approvals, queries and follow-up efforts in other areas. This is often the biggest hidden cost block.

3) Mandatory processes are underestimated

Reports and supporting documents are often assumed to be „automatic“. In practice, however, they require accurate data, checks and documentation – otherwise they will be returned.

Disclaimer of Responsibility

Even with external processing, responsibility for correct invoicing and timely notifications remains with the employer.

Checklist: Positioning „per employee“ correctly

  • Clarify volume: How many employees are actually paid each month?
  • Understanding complexity: How many Types of remuneration And are there special cases?
  • Set key dates: By when do timesheets, absences, and changes need to be submitted?
  • Corrections count: How often is there rework after the run?
  • Considering responsibilities: SV reporting procedure, ELStAM, Contribution certificate
  • Check the scope of services: What is included as standard, and what is an optional extra?
  • Secure documentation: File approvals, logs and reports in a way that allows them to be traced

FAQ

Payroll per employee

A key figure that relates the cost or price of payroll processing to the number of employees processed.

Is the cost per employee a good benchmark?

Only to a limited extent. Without taking complexity and process quality into account, the figure is of little significance.

What factors drive the cost?

Numerous variable pay components, frequent changes, adjustment runs and obligations such as SV reporting procedure, ELStAM and Contribution certificate.

What should one compare instead?

A holistic assessment taking into account volume, complexity, process quality and scope of services – not just a single metric.

Conclusion

„Payroll per employee“ is a useful budget and benchmark figure, but only when viewed in context. Those who also take into account complexity, corrections, data quality and mandatory processes will make significantly more reliable decisions – both internally and when selecting a service provider.

Author
the BAS editorial team

This glossary entry is for general information only.

Brasser Accounting Solutions GmbH is a specialised accounting service provider and part of a corporate group with Quint GmbH (tax consultancy/auditing) and Service Place Årjäng AB (Swedish tax office). BAS exclusively performs services according to § 6 No. 3 and 4 StBerG and does not provide tax or legal advice.