5 Recruiting Budget Templates (with Real Samples) 2026

How much do organizations allocate for recruitment? I discovered very few instances of an elaborate recruitment budget template on the internet. Thus, I reached out to my insightful recruiting acquaintances for assistance. Below is what I uncovered.

Let’s begin with a recruitment target in mind. How about 500 hires annually? That’s as suitable a figure as any for a large company.

Alright, let’s first examine 5 recruitment budget templates to consider.

1. Basic Recruiting Budget (# of Hires * Cost-per-Hire)

A solid point to initiate your recruitment budget is to determine your hiring volume over a defined timeframe. This can be as straightforward as 500 hires over the upcoming year.

The number of hires multiplied by the average expense per hire can offer you a rough calculation of how much you’ll invest in recruitment. You’re simply applying a basic formula:

{# of Hires * Cost-per-Hire}

An average expense-per-hire is fairly accessible to determine. Resources such as SHRM and Qureos estimate the average expense-per-hire to be roughly $4,700 to $4,800.

So, let’s take the midpoint of that spectrum: $4,750. Then, you simply multiply your $4,750 assumed expense-per-hire by the number of hires you need in a year (500 in this scenario). See below:

Illustration of Basic Recruiting Budget

How many individuals do you need to recruit this year? 500
Average expense per hire $4,750
Total Recruitment Expense $2,375,000

If your hiring mix is quite balanced and you’re not utilizing external recruiters, the straightforward {# of Hires * Cost-per-Hire} equation provides you with a reliable estimate for what you might allocate for recruitment.

However, to refine your recruitment expenses, it’s valuable to explore the next 2 strategies below:

2. Recruitment Budget by Source & Type (Internal Recruiter/Headhunter Blend)

Recruitment is seldom that straightforward (particularly for mid-market or large firms (500+ employees).

There are 2 additional important data points:

A) Job Type Distribution — You’ll want to dissect how many positions you require by job type (this could be categorized by seniority or department). To keep it uncomplicated, I’m going to utilize an imagined enterprise company that has the following hiring requirements for a 12-month timeframe:

Type of Hire # of Hires
High-Volume/Entry-Level/Support Roles 150
Sales/Mid-Level Roles 250
Technology Roles 85
Leadership/C-Suite 15
Total 500

B) Cost-per-Hire Varies by Job Type — Your cost-per-hire will fluctuate depending on the job type. A good guiding principle is that:

  • Entry-level/High-Volume positions typically have the lowest cost-per-hire — Depending on your sector, you may only need to invest $500 to $2,000 for each entry-level hire (let’s assume $2,000 each). You’d need to consult specialists in your area to ascertain this expected expense-per-hire (if uncertain, simply apply the $4,750 per hire which will be conservative).
  • Mid-level positions align closer to SHRM’s nonexecutive average of $5,475, which is higher than the $4,750 blended baseline in Template 1, since that average includes high-volume entry-level hires that lower the overall average.
  • C-Suite & Leadership positions incur the highest cost-per-hire (these roles are so difficult to fill that they are often outsourced to an executive search firm (headhunter) that charges between 15% to 25% of the first-year’s salary. SHRM’s 2025 Recruitment Benchmarking Report indicates the executive average at $35,879.

Examine the following sample budget for a new situation in which you are still attempting to recruit 500 individuals. You now incorporate more specifics regarding the volume by job types and their varied cost-per-hire.

Recruitment Budget by Source & Type

# of Hires Source Avg. Cost-per-Hire Total Recruiting Spend
High-Volume/Support Roles 150 Internal Recruiters $2,000 $300,000
Sales/Mid-Level Roles 250 Internal Recruiters $5,475 $1,368,750
Technology Roles 85 Internal Recruiters $7,000 $595,000
Leadership/C-Suite 15 Headhunter $35,879 $538,185
Total 500 $5,604 $2,801,935

In this instance, your overall recruiting expenditure ($2.8M) is significantly above the $2.4M computed using the basic {# of Hires * Cost-per-Hire} calculation. The major disparity, of course, comes from the Leadership/C-Suite roles — which add up to over $538K USD ($35,879 * 15 hires).

Your cost-per-hire is approximately 18% elevated ($5,604 compared to $4,750) relative to the straightforward formula from section 1.

3. Hiring Budget Utilizing an RPO

Another approach to gauge recruiting expenditure is by contemplating outsourcing the entire recruitment process to an RPO (Recruitment Process Outsourcing) firm.

The advantage of an RPO is that they suggest the recruiting resources, ensuring you are aware of your financial outlay. One prominent RPO is WilsonHCG. Their CEO John Wilson explains it this way:

“Recruitment is our expertise…that’s our speciality. Whether it’s Workday, Cisco or Apple, recruitment isn’t their area of expertise.”

A proficient RPO company will delineate your recruiting requirements based on job type and volume. For instance, if you provide your hiring requirements to an RPO like WilsonHCG, they might formulate a proposal similar to the following (again, referencing the 500 hires annually example):

Recruiting Budget Utilizing an RPO

# of Hires RPO Hires this Many Recruiters Cost per Recruiter Total RPO Recruiting Spend
High-Volume/Support Roles 85 1 $120,000 $120,000
Sales/Mid-Level Roles 225 3 $144,000 $432,000
Technology Roles 175 4 $162,000 $648,000
Leadership/C-Suite 15 2.5 $200,000 $500,000
Total 500 $1,700,000
Cost-per-Hire $3,400

You may observe that the overall recruiting expenditure ($1.7 million) and the cost-per-hire ($3,400) are the most economical among the three different recruiting budget strategies.

Certain organizations utilizing RPO generally achieve savings of 30% to 40% on recruitment expenses in comparison to conventional agencies (source: Dover – What is RPO), and this is evident in the reduced cost-per-hire presented above.

Moving forward, let’s examine a few example recruiting budgets from some friends who generously shared their insights:

4. An Example Recruiting Budget for Start-Ups

Category Description of Item Projected Expense Remarks
Job Advertising Job board advertisements (LinkedIn, Wellfound) $800 Enhanced posts (pay-per-click)
Social media promotions (FB, IG) $300 Targeted Campaigns
Recruiting Gatherings University Career Fairs $300 Booth setup
Local startup gatherings $500 Sponsorship costs
Software ATS $300 Yearly Subscription
HR Software $500 One-time buy
Background verifications Background Verification Services $115 Per Candidate
Recruiter Charges Recruitment Agency Charges $1500 Per Hire
Employee Recommendations Referral Incentives $1000 Per Successful Referral
Miscellaneous Office Essentials $100 Printing, Stationery
Total $5,415

Startups frequently operate under constrained financial means. Therefore, they must be meticulous about their expenditures and concentrate on utilizing affordable recruiting strategies.

Startups typically aim for swift growth, necessitating scalable recruiting techniques to fill vacant roles as rapidly as the organization expands. As newcomers in the sector, they must exert significant effort in cultivating and promoting their employer brand to entice high-caliber talent in a fiercely competitive landscape. They have to draw in candidates who are imaginative and capable of thriving in a dynamic and agile setting.

5. An Example Recruiting Budget for a Non-Profit Organization

Category Description of Item Projected Expense Remarks
Job Advertising Job board advertisements (LinkedIn, Idealist) $2000 Enhanced posts (pay-per-click)
Social media promotions (FB, IG) $1000 Targeted Campaigns
Recruiting Gatherings Nonprofit career fairs $1000 Booth setup
Community gatherings $500 Sponsorship costs
Software ATS $300 Annual Subscription
HR Software $500 One-time buy
Background verifications Background Verification Services $115 Per Candidate
Recruiter Charges Recruitment Agency Charges $1500 Per Hire
Employee Recommendations Referral Incentives $1000 Per Successful Referral
Miscellaneous Office Essentials $100 Printing, Stationery
Total $5,415
Software ATS $2500 Annual Subscription Volunteer Management Software $1500 One-time purchase Background Checks Background Check Services $115 Per Candidate Recruiter Fees Recruitment Agency Charges $3000 Per Hire Employee Referral Referral Incentives $1000 Per Successful Referral Training Onboarding Resources $500 Training Materials Training Sessions $1000 External Trainers Miscellaneous Office Supplies $100 Printing, Stationery Total $14,215

A nonprofit organization operates on a restricted budget when compared to their for-profit counterparts. They rely on contributions, grants, and financial support from other sources, necessitating careful resource management. Their budgets incorporate volunteer management tools and platforms.

Recruitment strategies focus on finding and overseeing volunteers, rather than paid employees. Thus, nonprofits must draw in applicants who are dedicated to their mission and values. They seek candidates with a strong commitment to social responsibility and community involvement.

Typical hiring methods involve community outreach and engagement to attract talent. Partnering with community organizations, educational institutions, and local events is generally more economical than posting job advertisements or hiring staffing agencies.

A Sample Recruiting Budget for a 500-Person Organization (hiring 100 annually)

My good friend Philip Ziman, an Adjunct Professor from the University of California, Santa Cruz, provides the following sample recruiting budget for a business with 500 employees. In this case, the Recruiting Manager reports to the VP of HR. The company expects to hire 100 individuals each year due to a necessary 5% headcount growth rate, albeit with a 15% turnover rate. All amounts are in $USD.

Fixed Costs

  • Recruiting Manager (fully loaded) – $200K
  • Scheduling Assistant (fully loaded) – $80K
  • ATS Software (annual subscription/maintenance) – $50K
  • LinkedIn (Recruiter seats + promoted posts)- $75K
  • Glassdoor subscription – $10K
  • Recruiting webpage maintenance – $5K
  • University relations contributions – $10K

Variable Costs

  • Contract recruiter per position – $5K
  • LinkedIn advertisements – $2K Agency fees per hire – $40K
  • Specialized advertisement per position – $2K
  • Candidate travel/expense per interview – $1K
  • Employee referral per hire – $1K

Indirect/Soft Costs

  • Management/Employee time per interview & onsite hosting – $.5K
  • Loss of productivity and training replacement per position – $100K

A Sample Recruiting Budget for a 600-Person Tech Firm (hiring 80 individuals yearly)

Another acquaintance of mine (anonymous) shared this illustration of how much a rapidly-expanding tech company allocates to recruiting. They typically hire around 80 people each year. It’s important to note that recruitment headcount continues to dominate most tech recruiting budgets — but the allocation for tools (16.6% here) has become increasingly relevant as streamlined teams are more reliant on technology to sustain output.

Recruiting Spend % of Total
Recruiting Headcount $1,400,000 70.0%
Recruiting tools $331,000 16.6%
Referral bonus $130,000 6.5%
Other Software (ATS) $68,000 3.4%
Employer branding $37,000 1.9%
Relocation (moving expenses) $34,000 1.7%
Aggregate $2,000,000 100%

Require additional recruiting budget entries? Here are a few more ideas:

Recruiting Budget Entries

Elaine Davidson, CEO of Beacon Lane Consulting, a global (albeit boutique) talent advisory firm, serves clients with budgets from $1 million to exceeding $10 million USD.

Elaine states that the precise list of recruiting budget entries hinges on the employer’s priorities at that time (e.g., implementing a new ATS, incorporating a sourcing tool, or improving candidate experience, etc.).

She identifies several primary categories her clients invest in for recruitment:

  • All-Inclusive Personnel Expenses
  • Annual ATS Licenses
  • LinkedIn Subscriptions
  • Online Presence: Employer Branding, Social Media, Glassdoor, etc.
  • AI Scheduling
  • Digital Interviewing
  • Digital Job Analysis/Text Analysis
  • Career Site Development
  • Executive Recruitment
  • Other Job Portals
  • Background Check Service Provider

Brad Cook, a talent acquisition specialist and consultant with over twenty years in organizations like Intuitive, Cisco, and Teradata, generally categorizes recruiting budgets into these 8 segments:

  • Personnel Expenses (FTE and contingent)
  • Essential Recruiting Tools
  • Supplementary Recruiting Tools
  • Travel
  • Search Fees (if applicable)
  • College Recruitment
  • Employee Referral Schemes
  • Programmatic Media Purchases

Tim Sackett, President of HRU Technical Resources, classifies recruiting costs (beyond personnel) into these 4 categories with illustrations for each:

  • Recruiting Tools (Sourcing – Loxo, texting – Paradox, etc.)
  • Recruitment Marketing (Indeed, LinkedIn, Zip, career site, email, SMS marketing, etc.)
  • Recruiting Expenditures (background checks, assessments, etc.)
  • Recruiting Travel (recruitment events, interview travel costs, etc.)

AI Recruiting Tools: The Budget Entry You Must Include in 2026

AI isn’t just approaching recruitment. It’s already present, and if it’s not a specified line item in your recruiting budget, it’s already obsolete. LinkedIn reported that 93% of recruiters intend to amplify their utilization of AI in 2026, and 59% assert it’s already aiding them in identifying candidates with skills they wouldn’t have discovered otherwise.

This isn’t a burgeoning expenditure category anymore — it’s as essential as your ATS or job board subscription.

What AI recruiting tools genuinely perform
AI currently encompasses nearly every phase of the hiring process:

  • Sourcing — evaluating millions of profiles to automatically present the most suitable candidates
  • Screening — arranging and filtering applicants before any recruiter examines a single resume
  • Scheduling — eliminating the back-and-forth of interview coordination entirely
  • Job description enhancement — identifying bias, enhancing clarity, and scoring JDs for efficacy (like Ongig’s Text Analyzer)
  • Candidate communication — AI chatbots managing FAQs, status updates, and application follow-ups on a large scale

Gartner advises commencing with high-volume, low-complexity tasks — consider retail workers, customer service representatives, drivers — where AI offers the most significant cost savings and the lowest implementation risk. Begin there, assess the ROI, then broaden.

Cost Estimates
Pricing can vary widely based on what you are purchasing and the size of your team. Entry-level tools typically start at around $50 per month. For enterprise-level solutions, comprehensive AI recruiting platforms may range from $150,000 to over $500,000 annually for very large organizations. Most mid-sized firms tend to fall between $50,000 and $150,000 yearly, while smaller organizations often spend $15,000 to $50,000.

Where to Integrate it into Your Budget
If you are utilizing the startup or nonprofit templates mentioned earlier in this article, incorporate “AI Recruiting Tools” as an individual line item along with your ATS. They serve distinct functions — your ATS governs the workflow, whereas AI tools enhance the decisions made within it.

For larger entities, AI expenditures are usually spread across various categories: sourcing tools, screening platforms, scheduling automation, and JD optimization. Each could stand alone as its line item or be consolidated under a single “AI Recruiting Tools” category — whichever simplifies reporting for your team.

One budget line many teams overlook: compliance costs. New York City’s Local Law 144 requires an annual bias audit before implementing automated hiring tools. More regions are following suit. If you’re scaling AI in your recruiting arsenal, factor in audit costs from the outset — they’re non-negotiable.

Recruiting Budget Additional Tips

Below are some further statistics/tips that may assist in estimating your recruiting expenditures:

Establish Hiring Objectives

Engage in discussions about your hiring objectives with the hiring manager to ensure that recruiting efforts are properly synchronized and timed to fulfill business demands.

Explicitly delineate your schedules, including the number of positions to fill, role types, and hiring timelines. Make your goals SMART, for instance:

“Recruit 10 software engineers within the next three months to support the development of a new product.”

Identify which positions are most vital to avoid overspending on less essential roles.

Capitalize on Economical Recruiting Channels

Advertise your job vacancies on free job boards, social media, and online professional networks. Implement

staff referral initiative, which tends to be less expensive yet yields superior hire quality.

Refine Job Promotions

Utilize focused job advertisements on LinkedIn and Facebook to engage specific demographics. You can reach potential candidates through job titles, locations, prior job searches, professional background, and if they’ve already encountered your job advertisement.

As per Appcast’s 2025 Recruitment Marketing Benchmark Report, application rates soared in 2024, finishing the year at 6.1%, approximately 35% higher from January to December. More job hunters are clicking and submitting applications. However, there’s a caveat: the median cost-per-click increased by over 27% to $1.00, contradicting predictions in a sluggish labor market. The median application cost remained relatively stable at $16.87.

The key insight for budget forecasting: a softer recruitment environment doesn’t necessarily imply lower job advertising costs. Appcast’s findings indicate that CPCs can diverge from labor market trends — so don’t presume that conditions will work in your favor. A focused, well-structured job advertisement strategy remains essential. Keep a close watch on your ad effectiveness and modify expenditure based on what is truly converting.

Monitor and Evaluate Recruitment Expenditures

Consistently record hiring costs against your budget: job advertisements, agency charges, background verifications, and referral incentives. For precision, employ software solutions to maintain thorough documentation.

Need Assistance in Selecting the Right HR Tool? Schedule a Free Expert Consultation Today

Assess your ROI for every recruitment channel and approach. Contrast your cost-per-hire with the industry standard to pinpoint areas needing enhancement. Concentrate on those channels that generate the most eligible candidates.

Track your time to fill hiring metrics. Shortening the time-to-hire can diminish costs linked to prolonged vacancies and decreased productivity.

Time-to-hire as an overlooked budget influence

Don’t disregard time-to-hire as a budget influence.

Gem’s Recruiting Benchmark Report discovered that the typical time-to-hire ranges from 33 to 41 days — a 24% rise in the number of days needed to recruit someone. The extra interview rounds and stakeholder engagement contributed to the increase in hiring duration. Each day a position remains unfilled incurs a tangible cost: diminished productivity, managerial time redirected to interviews, and in some instances, interim coverage or contractor expenses. Monitoring time-to-hire alongside your direct spending offers a more comprehensive understanding of what recruiting actually costs your organization.

Negotiate with Service Providers

Bargain over contracts and fees with recruitment agencies, job platforms, and background check services to secure optimal deals.

To cut costs, contemplate purchasing bulk packages for job postings or background checks. If you plan to hire throughout the year, contemplate annual subscriptions to ATS and other HR software to minimize fees.

Prep for Seasonal or Temporary Hiring

Elevate your budget during high hiring periods or when predictive turnover increases. Spread recruitment costs evenly over the year to prevent unnecessary overspending or budget surges.

Utilize temporary staffing agencies for short-term requirements or during recruitment spikes. Consider engaging contractors or freelancers for project-specific work to reduce long-term employment costs.

Embrace Flexibility

Establish a system for budget adjustments to address unforeseen hiring scenarios such as market fluctuations, industry alterations, or abrupt changes in staffing levels.

Reserve 5-10% of your recruiting budget for a contingency fund. This will assist in managing unexpected costs like urgent hires or sudden increases in advertising expenses. Adjust this percentage based on your organization’s size and sector.

Explore Internal Mobility

Commit to training and development initiatives to enhance your existing personnel ’promotion potential’ and advance to superior roles. Promoting from within cuts down external hiring expenses and boosts employee retention.

Initiate internships and mentoring programs to cultivate a talent pool of future team members. These programs serve as cost-efficient methods to evaluate potential recruits.

Continuously Enhance

Regularly examining your recruitment budget (quarterly or annually) assists in uncovering and resolving inefficiencies, enabling optimization of your resources and cost savings.

Gather feedback from your applicants and hiring leaders to identify areas for enhancement within your recruiting approach. Review your analytics dashboard to identify which channels or methods yield the best results. Analyze your competitors’ hiring practices to discover strategies you can integrate. Keep abreast of the latest recruiting trends and best practices to adjust your recruitment approaches accordingly.

WHY I COMPOSED THIS

(Editor’s note — We appreciate that numerous leading employers globally (including 12 Fortune 1,000 firms) have incorporated Ongig’s Text Analyzer into their recruitment budgets. Thank you! Visit Ongig.com if you wish to understand why.

Kudos:

    1. SHRM Publishes 2025 Benchmarking Reports: How Does Your Organization Measure Up? (by SHRM)
    2. Cost of Employing an Individual in the United States 2026 Manual (by Qureos)
    3. What is RPO (Recruitment Process Outsourcing)? March 2026 Manual (by Dover)
    4. AI Progress and Budget Pressures Are Two Forces Leading the Top Four Trends for Talent Acquisition in 2026 (by Gartner)
    5. Early 80% of individuals feel ill-prepared to secure a position in 2026, as two-thirds of recruiters state it’s more challenging to find quality talent (by LinkedIn)
    6. Talent Acquisition VP Brad Cook
    7. Philip ZimanUniversity of California, Santa Cruz
    8. Tim SackettHRU Technical Resources
    9. John Wilson, CEO of WilsonHCG
    10. The Future of Recruiting 2025: How AI redefines recruiting excellence (by LinkedIn)
    11. Annual Recruitment Marketing Benchmark Manual (by Appcast)
    12. 10 insights from the 2025 recruiting benchmarks report (by Gem)

by Heather Barbour Fenty in Recruiting Strategies

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