Onboarding cost by company size
Every competitor gives you one blended number. Here are three different realities: SMB founder-time onboarding, mid-market first-programme investment, and enterprise compliance burden.
| Factor | SMB (<50) | Mid-market (50-500) | Enterprise (500+) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Direct cost per hire | $600-$1,800 | $2,500-$5,000 | $3,000-$7,000+ |
| All-in per hire (knowledge worker) | $3,000-$8,000 | $12,000-$40,000 | $20,000-$60,000+ |
| Onboarding programme | Ad-hoc/informal | First structured programme | 40-80 hr formal curriculum |
| Recruiter source | Founder / hiring manager | Internal recruiter | Internal team + agencies |
| Equipment provisioning | Manual, day of hire | Semi-automated | Automated (Workday/Rippling) |
| Compliance burden | Minimal | Moderate | Heavy (multi-region, regulated) |
| Biggest hidden cost | Founder time | Manager ramp burden | Compliance cost + bureaucracy |
| Software used | Gusto / BambooHR | BambooHR / Lattice / Rippling | Workday / SAP SuccessFactors |
The founder time trap
SMB onboarding looks cheap because there is no L&D budget, no onboarding coordinator, and no compliance curriculum. Direct costs are genuinely low: $600-$1,800 per hire.
What the spreadsheet misses: founder or senior leader time. A founder worth $150-$300/hr spending 15-20 hours on each hire is spending $2,250-$6,000 of their highest-leverage time on activities that could be systematised. At a 20-person company hiring 10 people per year, that is $22,500-$60,000 of founder time on onboarding.
SMBs also have the fastest ramp times due to role clarity and direct access to decision-makers. The productive upside partially offsets the informal programme.
Gusto (payroll + basic onboarding) or BambooHR (HR-focused). Both automate paperwork and save 8-15 hrs per hire.
Full comparison →First programme investment
Mid-market is where onboarding stops being improvised and starts being a programme. HR teams are small (2-8 people) but they exist, and companies in this range are typically building their first formal onboarding curriculum. This is also where the cost variability is widest.
A mid-market company with a mature onboarding programme spends $2,500-$4,000 per hire in direct costs but sees 30-50% faster ramp than an ad-hoc approach. The ROI calculation is clear: investing $1,000 more in a structured programme saves $10,000-$20,000 in productivity ramp per hire for knowledge workers.
The biggest hidden cost at this size: manager ramp burden. Managers are not dedicated onboarding specialists; they carry a full operational load plus new-hire responsibility. The collision between both duties often degrades both.
BambooHR for HR-centric teams. Rippling for IT-heavy. Lattice where culture and performance management are priorities.
Full comparison →Compliance and coordination
Enterprise onboarding is expensive in direct costs ($3,000-$7,000 per hire) because it includes: multi-day orientation events, extensive compliance training (especially in regulated industries), security clearance processes, role-specific L&D tracks, and dedicated onboarding coordinators.
The counterintuitive advantage: economies of scale. A $2M annual investment in a Workday-based onboarding system is manageable when spread across 1,000 annual hires ($2,000 per hire in fixed costs). The same system would be prohibitive for a 50-person company.
Enterprise's biggest hidden cost is bureaucratic friction: slow equipment procurement, multi-week system access delays, and compliance requirements that exist for regulatory reasons but extend ramp time by 2-6 weeks.
Workday dominates. SAP SuccessFactors in manufacturing. Oracle HCM in legacy enterprises. Custom builds common.
Full comparison →The SMB advantage
Counterintuitively, SMBs often achieve faster ramp times than enterprise companies for equivalent roles. The reason: scope clarity. A new hire at a 30-person company interacts directly with the founders, understands the full business context within weeks, and has unambiguous responsibility from day 1. There are no 40-hour compliance curricula, no access request queues, and no organisational politics to decode. The agility advantage is real and partially offsets the programme investment disadvantage.