How to Calculate the ROI of Outsourcing to a Nearshore Team

Your outsourcing ROI calculation is simple: subtract the total cost of the nearshore engagement from the fully-loaded cost of doing the same work in-house, divide by the engagement cost, and multiply by 100. If a nearshore team costs $40,000 and replaces $70,000 of in-house labor, your ROI is 75%.

Last updated: 2026-06-17

Most owners feel that outsourcing saves money. Few can prove it on paper. When you need to justify the spend to a partner, a board, or your own gut, a feeling does not cut it. You need a number you can defend. This guide gives you the formula, a worked example, and the payback math so you can build a real business case.

The Outsourcing ROI Formula

Here is the core equation:

ROI (%) = (In-House Cost – Outsourcing Cost) ÷ Outsourcing Cost × 100

The trap is the first term. Most people plug in a US salary and stop there. That undercounts the real cost, which makes outsourcing look less attractive than it is.

You have to use the fully-loaded cost of the in-house option. That means base salary plus everything bolted on top. According to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, benefits make up roughly 30% of total employer compensation for private-industry workers. So a $60,000 salary already costs about $78,000 to $84,000 once you add payroll taxes, insurance, and paid leave.

Then add the costs that never show up on a salary line: recruiting, onboarding, software seats, equipment, management time, and the cost of an empty seat while you hire. Those last items are where the math really turns.

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What Goes Into the Calculation

Build two columns. One for keeping the work in-house, one for the nearshore team. Account for every dollar on both sides, not just the obvious ones.

Cost / Gain In-House (US) Nearshore Team
Base salary or service fee $60,000 $36,000
Benefits and payroll taxes (~30%) $18,000 Included in fee
Recruiting and onboarding $4,700 Included in fee
Equipment and office space $5,000 Included in fee
Management and HR overhead $6,000 Minimal
Total annual cost $93,700 $36,000

The nearshore column folds most line items into a single managed fee. That is the structural advantage. You stop paying for HR, payroll compliance and office space as separate problems.

On the gains side, do not forget revenue you protect or unlock. Faster ticket response, fewer abandoned orders and more selling hours for you are real returns. They are harder to pin down, so keep them as a separate, conservative line rather than padding the core ROI number.

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A Worked Example

Take a 12-person logistics company drowning in order-entry and tracking work. The owner is doing it at night. The choice is hiring a US back-office clerk or bringing on a nearshore team member.

The US clerk lands at roughly $93,700 fully loaded, using the table above. The nearshore equivalent runs about $36,000 all-in through a managed provider.

Plug it into the formula:

ROI = ($93,700 – $36,000) ÷ $36,000 × 100 = 160%

A 160% first-year ROI means every dollar spent on the nearshore team returns $1.60 in avoided cost. And that is before you count the owner’s recovered nights or the orders that stop slipping through the cracks.

This kind of gap is why outsourcing keeps growing. Deloitte’s 2024 Global Outsourcing Survey, which polled more than 500 executives, found cost reduction still ranks among the top drivers even as talent access rises alongside it.

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How Long Until It Pays for Itself

Payback period is the other half of the business case. It answers a question every owner has: when do I get my money back?

Payback (months) = Setup and ramp cost ÷ Monthly savings

The faster your team gets productive, the shorter this is. Slow ramp kills payback. If a US hire takes weeks to source and more weeks to train, you are paying for an empty or half-trained seat the whole time. SHRM’s State of Recruiting 2025 puts the average US hire at 44 days just to fill, not counting ramp.

A managed nearshore model compresses that. RAM BPO’s onboarding process gets a team operational in 7-10 business days. Faster time-to-value means your savings clock starts almost immediately, which pulls the payback period in.

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How Many Hires Before It Makes Sense

A common worry: do I need a big team to see returns? No. The ROI math works on a single role, because the savings come from the cost structure, not from volume.

That said, the per-head advantage compounds. Companies working with RAM BPO report 25-30% savings versus hiring equivalent staff locally in the US, and that percentage holds whether you place one person or ten. One role proves the model. The second and third roles scale it without re-running the whole business case.

If you want the raw price comparison behind these numbers, our nearshore vs. US hiring cost breakdown lays out the per-role figures. For the bigger picture on how the model works, start with our complete guide to nearshore outsourcing.

Common Mistakes That Skew the Number

Three errors wreck most outsourcing ROI calculations. First, using base salary instead of fully-loaded cost, which understates the in-house side. Second, ignoring turnover. Replacing a US support hire costs thousands and resets your ramp. Third, treating quality as free. A cheap offshore option that hurts your customer experience has a hidden cost that belongs in the model.

Build the number honestly and it will still favor a well-run nearshore team. You do not need to inflate anything to make the case.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you calculate the ROI of outsourcing?

Compare the fully-loaded in-house cost against the all-in outsourcing cost. Subtract the outsourcing cost from the in-house cost, divide that figure by the outsourcing cost, then multiply by 100. The result is your ROI percentage. Always use loaded cost, including benefits and overhead, not just base salary.

What is the formula for outsourcing ROI?

The formula is: ROI (%) = (In-House Cost – Outsourcing Cost) ÷ Outsourcing Cost × 100. In-House Cost must be fully loaded, meaning salary plus benefits, payroll taxes, recruiting, equipment and management time. Outsourcing Cost is the total managed fee. A positive percentage means the outsourcing option saves you money.

How many hires until offshore staffing becomes cost-effective?

Just one. The savings come from the cost structure, not headcount. A single nearshore role priced below your fully-loaded US cost already produces positive ROI. Adding more people scales those savings, but you do not need a large team to justify the first hire. One role proves it works.

What costs and gains go into an outsourcing ROI calculation?

On the cost side: base pay, benefits, payroll taxes, recruiting, onboarding, equipment, software, office space and management time. On the outsourcing side: the managed service fee. On the gains side, add protected or recovered revenue, such as faster response times and the owner’s hours freed for higher-value work.

How long until outsourcing pays for itself?

Divide your setup and ramp cost by your monthly savings to get the payback period in months. Faster onboarding shortens it. Because a managed nearshore team can be productive within days rather than the weeks a US hire needs, many engagements reach payback inside the first one or two months of operation.

How do I build a business case for outsourcing?

Start with two cost columns: fully-loaded in-house versus all-in outsourcing. Run the ROI formula and the payback math. Add a conservative line for protected revenue and recovered owner time. Note the speed advantage of fast onboarding. Present one role as the proof point, then show how it scales.

Key Takeaways

  • Use the formula ROI (%) = (In-House Cost – Outsourcing Cost) ÷ Outsourcing Cost × 100, with fully-loaded in-house cost.
  • Benefits add roughly 30% on top of salary per BLS data, so a $60,000 salary really costs $78,000 to $84,000.
  • A worked example often lands near 160% first-year ROI once you count every in-house line item.
  • Calculate payback by dividing setup cost by monthly savings; faster onboarding shortens it.
  • One role is enough to prove the model, because savings come from cost structure, not volume.

You now have the numbers to build the case yourself. If you want help running the math on a specific role, RAM BPO can model the fully-loaded comparison for your situation and show you what a managed nearshore team would actually cost. The formula is yours; the proof is one conversation away.

Related Reading: US Employee vs Colombia Employee: The True Cost Comparison (Real Numbers).

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