Your office manager is leaving.
Hire or automate?
Hiring an office admin costs $59,000 to $66,000 per year in total compensation, before recruiting and onboarding. A targeted AI workflow automation covering one to three operational processes like inbox triage, quote follow-up, or document drafting typically costs a fraction of that as a one-time build. This guide breaks down exactly when each option makes sense, with real numbers.
The true cost of an office admin in 2026
Most contractors think hiring costs whatever the salary is. It doesn't.
The median annual salary for an administrative assistant in the United States is $47,460 (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, May 2024). But salary is only 70% of what you actually pay.
According to BLS Employer Costs for Employee Compensation data, private industry benefits add approximately 29.8% on top of wages. That includes health insurance, paid leave, retirement contributions, and legally required costs like Social Security, Medicare, unemployment insurance, and workers' compensation.
Annual Compensation
The Small Business Administration estimates total employer cost at 1.25x to 1.4x base salary, which puts the range at $59,325 to $66,444 per year. We'll use $59,000–$66,000 as the working range.
But that's the ongoing cost. Hiring has a front-loaded cost too.
First-Year Total
And that assumes the hire works out. SHRM estimates the cost of a bad hire at 30% to 50% of annual salary — between $14,000 and $24,000 in wasted spend if the person leaves or underperforms within the first year.
New employees operate at approximately 25% productivity during their first four weeks, and it takes 8 to 26 weeks to reach full productivity.
When to automate, when to hire, when to do both
This is not an either/or decision. It is a question of what the work actually consists of.
Automate when
- → The task happens more than 10 times per week
- → The task follows a recognizable pattern
- → The inputs are digital (email, form, document, CRM entry)
- → The cost of a mistake is low or the task includes a review step
Examples: quote follow-up emails, inbox sorting, timesheet collection, status update routing, first-draft document generation
Hire when
- → The work requires human judgment on a per-case basis
- → Relationships matter (customer trust, vendor negotiation)
- → Physical presence is needed
- → The scope of work changes frequently and unpredictably
Examples: customer escalation handling, on-site coordination, complex scheduling, sales conversations
Do both when
- → Your office has a mix of repetitive admin and judgment work
- → Your admin spends 60%+ of their time on automatable tasks
- → You want to hire for coordination, not data entry
- → You are replacing a departing employee and want to reduce the scope of the replacement role
Side by side
| Hire | Automate | |
|---|---|---|
| First-year cost | $68,000–$75,000 | One-time build + maintenance |
| Ongoing annual cost | $59,000–$66,000 | Hosting + occasional updates |
| Time to productivity | 8–26 weeks | 4–7 weeks to deploy |
| Handles novel situations | Yes | No |
| Available 24/7 | No | Yes |
| Scales without headcount | No | Yes |
| Turnover risk | Yes (avg 13.5% voluntary rate) | No |
| Handles relationships | Yes | No |
| Benefits required | Yes | No |
Not sure which applies to you?
We will audit one workflow in your operations and tell you honestly whether automation makes sense — or whether you should hire. No pitch. Just the analysis.
Last updated: March 2026. All salary and cost data sourced from BLS and SHRM. Links to original sources provided.