Realization rate calculator

Calculate your realization rate and see how much billable work turns into revenue. Identify lost revenue from unbilled time, scope creep, discounts, and write-offs.

What is realization rate?

Realization rate measures how much of your billable work ultimately gets invoiced.

The formula
Realization rate = Revenue billed ÷ Billable work value × 100

Knowing your true realization rate helps you price projects more accurately, identify revenue leakage, and protect margins without raising rates.

Manual timesheets
Timer app
Automatic tracking Recommended
Logging time from memory tends to understate billable work, which inflates your realization rate.
hours

The total number of billable hours worked during the selected period.

$ / hr

Your standard billing rate before discounts or write-offs.

Billable work value (hours × rate)
$0
$

The amount actually invoiced to clients.

Preview · fill in the fields above
Your realization rate
%
Result appears here
↘ Revenue left on the table
$

The difference between billable work performed and revenue invoiced.

✨ Did you know?

Automatic time tracking helps teams capture more billable hours, without working more.

  • Capture billable work that would otherwise be forgotten
  • Identify scope creep before it becomes a problem
  • Create more accurate timesheets
  • Justify every billed hour with reliable documentation
See how

How much of your billable work are you getting paid for?

Check your realization rate and see how much money you’re leaving on the table
🔍 For visibility
Stopping revenue leakage
Stop revenue leakage
You and your team put in the hours, but did you get paid for ALL those hours? The realization rate calculator shows you exactly how much billable value is getting lost and why (most likely due to forgotten time entries).
🏷️ For pricing
Pricing services accurately
Accurately price services
If you’re constantly realizing less than you bill, your effective rate is lower than you think. Knowing your realization rate gives you the data you need to set proper rates, accept or deny engagements, and negotiate contract terms.
📊  For benchmarking
Knowing your numbers
Know your numbers
The calculator shows you the realization percentage, which acts as your starting point. A realization rate of 85% or above is considered healthy for most service businesses. If you got below 75%, that’s a signal your processes need improvement.

How to use the realization rate calculator

Understanding your realization rate isn’t complicated. This calculator shows exactly how much of your billable work turned into revenue, and how much didn’t, so you can see the leakage in numbers.

It only takes a few numbers (and seconds) to get your result. Here’s what each calculator field means and how to fill it in.
💡 What is the realization rate?

Realization rate is the metric that shows how much of your billable work turns into revenue.

If you work in law, accounting, consulting, or really any professional service business, the realization rate is one of the most telling numbers in your firm, as it shows how much of your billable work ultimately turns into revenue.

The formula is pretty straightforward: Realization rate = Revenue billed ÷ Billable work value × 100.

So, if your team did $100,000 worth of billable work in a month but only invoiced $82,000, your realization rate is 82%. And that 18% is the revenue you worked for but didn't capture.

💡 What is a good realization rate?

The realization rate can go up and down. A good realization rate depends on your industry and the type of work you do. The general benchmarks we use in this calculator are:

  1. ≥ 85% — Healthy. Your billing process is working well, and you're capturing most of what you earn, so revenue leakage is under control.
  2. 75–84% — Below target. There's definitely room for improvement, as something in your time capture, billing, or client management process is costing you money.
  3. < 75% — Needs attention. This number shows that a significant portion of your billable work isn't turning into revenue, so you should dig into where the gap is and address it promptly.

Keep in mind that these thresholds aren't universal. A litigation firm, an accounting practice, and a 200-person consultancy will all have different benchmarks based on their billing models, clients, and write-off policies. The realization percentage you get should be a starting point, not a rigid rule.

Choose your currency & time tracking method

Before entering any numbers, you’ll need to set 2 things: your preferred currency and how you track billable time.

For currency, just pick whichever you use for invoicing—USD, EUR, or GBP. The currency you choose applies to all values in the calculator.

The time tracking question is worth a moment of thought, because it affects how you should read your results. You should pick one option that best describes how your team logs time:

Manual timesheets. This method suggests that your team fills in hours at the end of the day, week, or whenever they get around to it. It’s a pretty common method, but also the least accurate, as hours get forgotten, estimates replace real numbers, and short tasks rarely make it onto the timesheets.

• Timer app. A timer is started and stopped throughout the day as work happens. It’s more accurate than timesheets, but still relies on remembering to start and stop, which is hard to do in the middle of a client call or back-to-back meetings.

Automatic tracking. This method suggests using software that runs in the background and captures how time is spent without any manual input. It’s the most accurate option and captures actual billable hours, including those that would otherwise be forgotten.

Now, why does a time tracking method matter for your realization rate?

Well, if you’re tracking time via timesheets or with a timer, your billable hours figure is likely understated. This means that your billable work value, the denominator in the realization rate formula, is lower than it should be, which makes your realization rate look better than it actually is. Automatic tracking gives you an honest number to work with.

Enter your billable hours worked

Start by entering the total number of billable hours worked during the period you want to measure. It could be a week, a month, a quarter, whatever makes sense for your business.

This number should reflect all the time your team actually spent on billable client work, no matter if it was invoiced or not.

If you track time automatically, pull the number directly from your time tracking tool. If you track manually, use your best available figure, but keep in mind that manual logs tend to undercount, which can make your realization rate look healthier than it actually is.

Enter your standard hourly rate

In this step, you need to enter your standard billing rate, which is the hourly rate you charge clients before any discounts, write-offs, or adjustments.

If you have multiple people billing at different rates, you can use a blended average rate or run the calculator separately for each person or team. The goal is to get an accurate picture of the full value of the billable work performed.

Once your billable hours and hourly rate are entered, you’ll be able to see the Billable work value. This value is automatically calculated using the two numbers: Billable work value = Billable hours worked × Standard hourly rate.

So, if your team logged 120 billable hours at $200/hour, your billable work value is $24,000.

Consider this number the starting point or the ceiling of what you could have billed.

Enter your revenue billed

The last number you need to enter is revenue billed, or the amount you actually invoiced and collected for the same period. This number should be the one that made it onto an invoice and was paid (or is expected to be paid).

Don’t worry if your billing cycle doesn’t line up perfectly with the period you’re measuring. If that’s the case, just use the closest match you have. The goal here is pretty simple: compare the work you did in a given period with the revenue that work actually brought in.

Read your results

Once you’ve filled in all 3 fields, the calculator gives you 2 outputs.

The first one is your realization rate, or the percentage of your billable work value that turned into actual revenue. The formula is: Realization rate = Revenue billed ÷ Billable work value × 100.

So, for example, if you billed $20,000 out of a $24,000 billable work value, your realization rate is 83.3%, which puts you in the “below target” range and suggests there’s around $4,000 a month you’re working for but not capturing.

The second number is revenue left on the table. This is the dollar amount of billable work that didn’t turn into revenue. Basically, it’s the difference between what you performed and what you invoiced: Revenue left on the table = Billable work value − Revenue billed.

Now, this number will surely catch your attention, especially if you see it as an annual figure.
💡 Why is your realization rate so low?

Imagine this: you put in the numbers, did the calculation and... well, let's just say you didn't get the number you were hoping for.

Why is that?

Well, the answer depends on your business, but there are a few common culprits, and most companies deal with more than one of them at a time:

  1. Uncaptured billable time. When time is tracked manually or logged from memory at the end of the day, hours slip through. A quick client call here, a short review there, it all adds up and never gets recorded (and, therefore, never gets billed).
  2. Write-offs and discounts. Sometimes you do the work, log the hours, and then write them off anyway because the client pushes back, a matter runs longer than expected, or simply because a relationship is involved. Write-offs are sometimes unavoidable, but if they're happening consistently, they'll bring your realization rate down.
  3. Scope creep. The project expanded, and you delivered, but the contract didn't account for it, so those extra hours never made it onto an invoice. Scope creep is one of the most common reasons businesses end up realizing less than they should.
  4. Billing delays and errors. The longer the gap between the work done and the invoice sent, the more likely it is that hours will be missed, forgotten, or questioned. And billing mistakes like wrong rates, missing time entries, or charges that weren't signed off take a bite out of your realization.
💡 How can you improve your realization rate?

Most realization problems are fixable. Plus, you don't have to tackle all of them at once.

Our suggestion is to start with time capture, as it's where the quickest gains are. If your team is logging hours manually or from memory, switch to automatic time tracking. Such tracking tends to surface hours that were previously invisible, like client calls, quick reviews, and all the small tasks.

If your time capture works well but your realization rate is still low, look at your write-offs. Are they piling up around certain clients, types of work, or specific team members? Look for patterns, and you'll see you're probably dealing with a pricing or scoping problem, not a billing one. This means the fix isn't on the invoice side at all but something you need to sort out earlier in the process.

For scope creep, the best thing you can do is tighten agreements at the start and flag out-of-scope work as it comes up.

If billing delays are the issue, rely on automatic time tracking again. When hours are logged in real time, your invoices basically write themselves; everything is already captured, organized, and ready to go. That alone can shrink the gap between work done and the invoice out the door.

FAQs

Your questions, answered
What’s the difference between realization rate and utilization rate?
Is the realization rate only relevant for law firms?
Can my realization rate be artificially high?
How often should I calculate my realization rate?
What should I do if my realization rate is below 75%?