Founders agonize over whether a senior hire is too expensive and ignore the more expensive thing: the empty seat while they decide. Vacancy is a cost, it compounds weekly, and it almost never makes it onto the board.
Key Takeaways
- Replacing an employee runs 50–200% of salary, with senior and specialized roles toward the upper end, per SHRM.
- New hires take 3–6 months to reach full output, so the cost outlasts the hire date.
- A vacant role drains roadmap, overloads the team, and slips launches, none of which show on a spreadsheet.
- Ruzora's 72-hour shortlist exists to shrink the most expensive variable: vacancy duration.
What the Numbers Say
SHRM puts the cost of replacing an employee at 50–200% of their annual salary, with senior and specialized roles falling toward the upper end of that range. Against the US median developer wage of $133,080, even the middle of that range puts replacing one engineer at roughly $100K–$200K, before counting the ramp.
And the ramp is real: a new hire typically needs three to six months to reach full output. So even after you fill the seat, you carry a reduced-productivity period the spreadsheet ignores.
The Costs That Never Get Counted
| Cost | Shows on the budget? |
|---|---|
| Recruiting fees, job ads | Yes |
| Productivity gap during vacancy | No |
| 3–6 month ramp to full output | No |
| Team overload absorbing the work | No |
| Slipped launches / lost roadmap | No |
The visible costs are the small ones. The vacancy gap, the ramp, and the burnout on the people covering the gap are larger and invisible. That's why a role left open for months to save on salary usually loses money.
The Lever Most Teams Miss
If vacancy is the expensive part, speed is the fix. A pre-vetted bench turns a multi-month search into a 72-hour shortlist, which collapses the most expensive line item. You interview to confirm, not to filter, and the seat is productive in weeks. Model the cost of the delay you're carrying in the ROI calculator, then see who's available.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost to replace an engineer?
SHRM estimates 50–200% of salary, with senior and specialized roles toward the upper end. Against a $133K median wage, that's roughly $100K–$200K+ per replacement, plus ramp.
Why is a vacancy so expensive?
The visible recruiting costs are small. The productivity gap, the 3–6 month ramp, team overload, and slipped roadmap are larger and rarely counted.
How do I reduce vacancy cost?
Cut the time the seat sits empty. A pre-vetted bench delivers a shortlist in 72 hours, versus a multi-month search.
The Bottom Line
Stop comparing a hire's salary to zero. Compare it to the cost of the seat staying empty, which SHRM and the ramp data say is steep. The fastest way to save money on a hire is to stop leaving it open.
Roberto Espinoza is CEO of Ruzora, which helps US startups hire pre-vetted senior LATAM engineers in 72 hours. See available engineers.
