Last verified April 2026

How to Build a Tech Hiring Budget

This guide turns the data on this site into a practical budget plan. Whether you are a startup hiring 5 engineers or an enterprise planning 50+ hires, the framework is the same: calculate per-hire cost by role mix, add contingency, and present it in terms the CFO understands. Three scenario models, a complete line-item template, and a quarterly review framework are included below.

The Budget Formula

Total Hiring Budget = (Number of Hires x Average Cost Per Hire) x 1.15 contingency buffer

This is the starting point. Refine it by breaking down hires by role category (engineering, data, product, design, security) because each has different per-hire costs. Apply the role-specific cost data from our roles hub to build a bottoms-up budget that accounts for the actual mix of roles you need to fill. The 15% contingency covers failed searches (30-40% of searches restart at least once), market shifts, and unexpected hiring needs.

Three Budget Scenarios

Startup (5 Engineers)

$75K-$150K
3x Mid SWE via referral/direct$24K-$42K
1x Senior SWE via agency$35K-$48K
1x DevOps via agency$30K-$45K
Job boards + tools$8K-$12K
Contingency (15%)$12K-$22K

Maximise referrals and direct sourcing. Use agencies only for the hardest-to-fill roles. A $5K-$8K referral bonus is 5x cheaper than agency fees.

Scale-Up (15 Mixed Roles)

$225K-$450K
8x Engineering roles (mixed)$120K-$240K
3x Data/ML roles$45K-$75K
2x Product/Design roles$25K-$50K
2x DevOps/Security roles$30K-$60K
Internal recruiter (partial year)$45K-$60K
Contingency (15%)$35K-$65K

At 15 hires, an internal recruiter begins to pay for itself. Use RPO consideration at this volume. Target 30-40% referral fill rate.

Enterprise (50+ Roles)

$750K-$1.5M
30x Engineering (RPO model)$150K-$240K
8x Data/AI roles (agency)$100K-$200K
5x Product/Design (mixed)$50K-$100K
5x Infrastructure/Security (agency)$80K-$150K
2x Executive (retained search)$120K-$200K
Internal recruiting team (3)$300K-$400K
Employer brand investment$50K-$80K
Contingency (15%)$100K-$200K

At 50+ hires, RPO + internal team is the most cost-effective. Invest heavily in employer brand to reduce agency dependency. Target 40-50% direct/referral fill rate.

Budget Line-Item Template

Use this template to build a comprehensive hiring budget. Each line item includes a typical range for a company making 15-20 tech hires per year. Adjust based on your specific role mix, location, and hiring channel preferences.

CategoryLine ItemAnnual Range
Agency FeesContingency recruiter fees (10-12 placements)$200K-$360K
Agency FeesRetained search fees (2-3 senior/exec)$80K-$150K
ToolsATS subscription (Greenhouse, Lever, Ashby)$15K-$40K
ToolsLinkedIn Recruiter seats (2-3)$16K-$36K
ToolsTechnical assessment platform$10K-$25K
AdvertisingJob board postings (Indeed, specialist boards)$15K-$30K
AdvertisingEmployer brand (blog, conferences, content)$25K-$60K
InternalInternal recruiter(s) fully loaded$90K-$250K
InternalHiring manager time allocation$60K-$120K
InternalInterviewer time allocation$30K-$60K
ProgrammeEmployee referral bonuses$25K-$60K
ProgrammeBackground checks and assessments$5K-$15K
ProgrammeRelocation packages (if applicable)$20K-$100K
ContingencyFailed search buffer (15%)$50K-$120K

Build vs Buy: Internal Recruiting Capability

The break-even point for investing in an internal recruiter versus outsourcing all hiring to agencies is approximately 15-20 hires per year. Below 15 hires, the internal recruiter's salary and tools exceed the agency fees you would pay. Above 20 hires, the internal recruiter saves $200,000-$400,000 annually versus full agency outsourcing. The calculation: an internal recruiter at $90,000-$120,000 fully loaded, filling 12-18 roles per year, gives a per-hire cost of $6,000-$10,000. Agency fees at 20% on $150K average salary cost $30,000 per hire. At 15 hires, the saving is $300,000-$360,000 in agency fees minus $130,000-$160,000 in recruiter cost and tools -- a net saving of $140,000-$230,000.

The hybrid model works best: hire an internal recruiter for volume roles and use agencies for senior, scarce, or confidential searches. Most companies operating at 15+ hires per year use a 60/40 split (60% internal, 40% agency) which optimises for both cost and quality. For a deeper analysis of hiring channel economics, see our channel comparison guide.

Presenting the Budget to the CFO

CFOs evaluate hiring budgets through three lenses: cost efficiency, risk mitigation, and revenue impact. Frame your budget presentation around all three to maximise the chance of approval without extensive negotiation.

Cost Efficiency

Show per-hire cost versus industry benchmarks ($15,200 tech average). Demonstrate savings from internal recruiting versus agency outsourcing. Compare your proposed channel mix to the optimal distribution. Show year-over-year cost reduction if applicable.

Risk Mitigation

Quantify the cost of bad hires ($235K-$545K each) to justify investment in proper assessment. Show the cost of failed searches (30-40% restart rate) to justify contingency buffer. Present competitor compensation data to justify salary bands and reduce offer rejection risk.

Revenue Impact

Calculate vacancy cost for each planned hire ($500-$1,500/day). Show total revenue at risk from delayed hiring: 20 roles x 52 days avg x $600/day = $624,000 in vacancy cost. Frame the hiring budget as a revenue enabler, not a cost centre. Present the 'do nothing' scenario: what happens if these roles are not filled.

Quarterly Review Framework

Hiring budgets should not be set-and-forget. Market conditions, team priorities, and hiring velocity change throughout the year. Review and adjust quarterly using these five metrics: cost per hire by channel (are agencies still delivering ROI?), fill rate versus plan (are you on track?), offer acceptance rate (is compensation competitive?), 90-day retention (is hiring quality holding?), and budget burn rate versus forecast (will you overshoot or undershoot?).

The most common budget adjustment is reallocating between channels mid-year. If referral fill rates exceed expectations, shift agency budget to referral bonuses. If senior roles are taking longer than planned, reallocate from job board spend to retained search fees. Flexibility in allocation (while maintaining the total budget) allows you to optimise spend based on real-time data rather than year-old assumptions. See our cost reduction guide for more optimisation strategies.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much should a tech company budget for hiring?

Rule of thumb: 15-20% of first-year salary per hire for recruitment costs. For a team of 10 engineers at $150K average, budget $225,000-$300,000 for recruitment alone. Add 10% contingency for failed searches and restarts. This excludes salary, benefits, equipment, and onboarding -- it covers only the cost of finding and hiring the candidates.

What line items should a tech hiring budget include?

Essential line items: recruiter fees by model (agency, retained, RPO), job board subscriptions (LinkedIn Recruiter, Indeed, specialist), ATS subscription, technical assessment tools, interview time allocation, employer branding (engineering blog, conferences), referral bonuses, relocation packages, background checks, and a 10-15% contingency buffer for failed searches and market shifts.

When does it make sense to invest in an internal recruiting team?

The break-even point is approximately 15-20 hires per year. An internal recruiter costs $90K-$120K fully loaded and fills 12-18 roles annually, giving a per-hire cost of $6K-$10K. Compare this to 20% agency fees on $150K average salary ($30K per hire). At 15 hires, the internal recruiter saves $300K-$360K versus full agency outsourcing, easily covering their cost and tools.

How should I present a hiring budget to the CFO?

Frame in three ways the CFO understands: 1) Cost of vacancy (show revenue impact of unfilled roles: $500-$1,500/day per role), 2) Cost per hire versus industry benchmarks (demonstrate you are at or below market rates), 3) ROI of quality hiring (reference bad hire costs of $235K-$545K to justify investment in proper recruiting). Always present a 'do nothing' scenario showing the cost of not hiring.