Industrial Business Finance
Machinery ROI &
Payback Period Calculator
Strip the emotion out of equipment procurement. Calculate exact payback timelines and annualized returns before the purchase order is cut.
⚙️ ROI & Payback Calculator
Machinery ROI & Payback Period
Net monthly savings · payback months · annual ROI %
Capital Expenditure
Total delivered and installed cost — includes freight, rigging, electrical, tooling, and calibration.
Monthly Cost & Savings Inputs
Preventative maintenance contracts, consumables, calibration, and software licenses.
Direct hours eliminated from the production line.
Base wage + taxes + benefits + workers' comp.
Gross margin from additional units produced due to higher throughput or reduced scrap.
About Machinery ROI
What is the fully burdened labor rate and why does it matter?
The fully burdened rate is the true hourly cost of an employee — not just their base wage. It adds employer-paid payroll taxes (FICA, FUTA, SUTA), workers' compensation insurance, health benefits, retirement contributions, and any shift differentials. For most U.S. manufacturers, the burden adds 25–40% above base wage. Using base wage alone understates labor savings and makes the machine look less attractive than it actually is — or conversely, leads to over-optimistic projections if burden is double-counted elsewhere.
What should I include in the monthly maintenance cost?
Use a monthly average of all recurring and anticipated costs: preventative maintenance contracts with the OEM or a third-party service provider, consumable wear parts (blades, seals, filters, lubricants), calibration and certification services required for quality compliance, software licensing fees for machine control systems, and any dedicated tooling that requires periodic replacement. Do not include one-time capital repairs — those are separate CapEx events.
How do I calculate increased production output value?
This is the gross margin value of additional units you can produce and sell because the new machine unlocked capacity. If the machine eliminates a bottleneck that was capping output at 10,000 units/month and the new machine allows 12,000 units/month, and your gross margin per unit is $0.50, your output value is $1,000/month. Also include the margin value of reduced scrap — if the machine drops your defect rate from 4% to 0.5% on $500,000/month of material, that's $17,500/month in recovered gross margin.
What annual ROI percentage is considered good for industrial equipment?
Most corporate finance teams require a minimum internal hurdle rate of 15–25% annual ROI for capital equipment purchases. An ROI above 50% is considered strong and will typically win fast approval. Above 75–100% and you're in exceptional territory — the machine essentially pays for itself within 12–15 months. Anything below 15% typically requires a longer strategic justification (e.g., safety compliance, quality certification requirements, or competitive necessity) to clear the capital allocation process.