The Real Cost of Hiring Your First Employee in 2025

by / ⠀Startup Advice / November 24, 2025

You’ve hit that point every early founder eventually reaches: you’re drowning in work, your product roadmap is slipping, your customer replies are getting slower, and you’re doing five jobs badly instead of one job well. You know you need help. But the moment you even think about hiring, you feel the panic: payroll, taxes, compliance, onboarding, mis-hires, and the fear that one wrong decision could burn three months of runway. Every founder talks about “making your first hire,” but almost no one tells you what it actually costs, in dollars, in time, and in emotional overhead.

To write this guide, we reviewed founder interviews from Y Combinator, 20VC, First Round Review, and operator playbooks where early-stage CEOs openly documented their first hires, payroll mistakes, mis-hire costs, and compensation frameworks. We cross-referenced those accounts with publicly available salary data, 2024–2025 employment tax guidelines, and startup hiring benchmarks shared by founders in podcast appearances and shareholder letters. The focus was on what founders actually did when making their first hire, the decisions, the tradeoffs, the costs, the regrets, not theories or HR textbook advice.

In this guide, you’ll learn the full cost of hiring your first employee in 2025, financial, operational, and psychological, so you can make a confident, runway-conscious decision.

Why This Matters Now

Hiring your first employee is one of the biggest inflection points in a founder’s journey. Until now, every mistake was recoverable. Once someone depends on you for their livelihood, the stakes change. Early-stage founders often underestimate the cost of a first hire by 30 to 50 percent, and the hidden costs, compliance, tools, turnover, mis-hires, and slower decision cycles can tank the runway faster than headcount itself.

For most Under30CEO readers operating with 9 to 18 months of runway, this decision determines whether you extend your capacity or accelerate your burn. Your goal over the next 30 to 60 days is simple: decide if you should hire, what role moves the needle, and what the true cost will be. Get this wrong and you lose months. Get it right and you buy back 20 to 40 hours a week of founder time.

The Complete Breakdown: The Real Cost of Hiring Your First Employee in 2025

1. The Base Salary (The Number Everyone Sees)

Founders usually start here, and usually stop here. But base salary is just the beginning.

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Typical early-stage startup salaries in 2025:

  • Growth/Marketing generalist: $55k–$85k
  • Full-stack developer: $95k–$150k
  • Customer success/support: $50k–$70k
  • Ops/business generalist: $55k–$85k

These ranges come directly from founders who shared their compensation bands on recent YC and First Round Review interviews. But the real mistake founders make is assuming this is the whole cost.

Rule of thumb: Add 20% to 40% to every salary for hidden costs.

2. Taxes & Required Contributions (Add 12%–20%)

The moment you hire, your cost jumps significantly due to required employer-side taxes.

Most founders underestimate these because they’ve never run payroll before.

You’re responsible for:

  • Employer Social Security
  • Employer Medicare
  • State unemployment insurance
  • Federal unemployment
  • Workers’ comp (varies by state and role)
  • State-mandated benefits (e.g., paid leave requirements)

In practical founder terms:
A $70k salary typically costs you $78k–$84k before benefits or tools.

3. Benefits (Even “Minimal” Benefits Add Up Fast)

You don’t need a tech-giant benefit suite to attract your first employee, but you do need a baseline.

Common early-stage benefit costs:

  • Basic health insurance contribution: $300–$600/month
  • Vision/dental: $20–$60/month
  • HR/payroll platform fees: $40–$200/month
  • Retirement match (optional but competitive): 2%–3% of salary

Even the scrappiest package adds roughly $4k–$8k/year to your cost per hire.

4. Tools, Software, and Access (Usually Forgotten)

Every employee needs a complete workstation.

Typical first-year costs:

  • Laptop + accessories: $1,400–$2,200
  • SaaS tools (email, project mgmt, CRM, code tools): $800–$2,000
  • Seat licenses you never needed before: $400–$1,000

Minimum extra cost: $2,500–$4,000 per employee.

5. Onboarding Costs (Time = Money)

This is the part that founders chronically underestimate.

Your first hire requires:

  • 40–80 hours of founder time to onboard
  • Writing processes you never wrote before
  • Training, shadowing, reviews, corrections
  • Slower velocity during the ramp period (2–8 weeks)

When founders discuss this on podcasts like 20VC, they repeatedly call it the “founder tax.” You buy back time later, but you lose time immediately.

Realistic first-month productivity?
30%–60% of fully ramped output.

6. The Cost of a Mis-Hire (The Part No One Likes Discussing)

Founders on YC panels often repeat the same line:
A mis-hire costs 3–5x the employee’s salary.

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Where that cost comes from:

  • 1–3 months of onboarding time wasted
  • 1–3 months of severance or payroll before parting
  • Lost customers or slowed product delivery
  • The emotional and cognitive drag on the founder
  • Recruiting costs to repeat the process
  • Burnt runway

This is why your first hire should be someone who increases founder productivity and reduces cognitive load, not someone who requires micromanagement.

7. Contractor vs Full-Time Employee: The Real Tradeoff

Founders often ask: “Should I hire full-time or contract first?”

Here’s the honest decision framework many founders actually used:

Hire a contractor if:

  • You’re testing whether the work is recurring
  • You’re unsure about long-term fit
  • Cash flow is tight
  • The work is project-based
  • You need speed more than continuity

Hire full-time if:

  • The work is core to the business
  • You need someone thinking daily about a function
  • The job requires deep context
  • You need reliability, not availability
  • You’re ready to manage someone

Most founders in interviews said they wished they had tested with contractors longer before hiring full-time.

8. The Emotional Cost (Yes, It’s Real)

Every founder who has publicly discussed their first hire mentions the same hidden burden:

  • Guilt when you’re behind on payroll
  • Fear of letting someone down
  • Stress of being responsible for someone’s livelihood
  • Imposter syndrome around leadership
  • Anxiety of “What if I made the wrong call?”

None of this shows up in spreadsheets.
But it absolutely impacts you, your health, and your decision-making.

Hiring your first employee forces you to shift identity, from builder to leader, and that transition has its own cost.

Snapshot Table: The Total Cost of a First Hire in 2025

Cost Category Typical Range Notes
Base Salary Varies by role $50k–$150k typical early-stage
Employer Taxes 12%–20% Required and unavoidable
Benefits $4k–$8k/year Even basic healthcare costs add up
Tools/Setup $2.5k–$4k first year Hardware + software
Onboarding Cost 40–80 founder hours Often an invisible cost
Mis-hire Risk 3–5x salary If the decision is rushed
True Annual Cost Base salary + 30%–50% Real number you should budget

To translate that: a $70k hire typically costs $95k–$105k in year one.

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9. The Right First Hire: The 3 Roles That Actually Multiply Founder Time

Across dozens of founder interviews, three patterns emerged. The best first hires tend to be:

1. Customer Success / Support Generalist

Frees the founder from reactive work, protects users, and captures feedback.

2. Product/Engineering Generalist

If your bottleneck is shipping, then doubling your output doubles your output.

3. Operations/Business Generalist

Takes admin, logistics, and complexity off your plate.

The first hire should unlock more founder time than they cost in runway.

10. Should You Hire Now? Use This Decision Test

Ask yourself:

  1. Am I doing work daily that someone else could do better or faster?
  2. Is the lack of help slowing product or revenue growth?
  3. Do I have at least 9 months of runway post-hire?
  4. Can I clearly define success for the first 90 days?
  5. Do I have time to properly onboard someone?
  6. Is the role recurring rather than project-based?

If you answer “no” to more than two of these, delay hiring and use contractors.

Do This Week (Practical Takeaway)

  1. Map your weekly hours and highlight the 15 hours someone else could own.
  2. Estimate the true cost of hiring for your role: salary + 30–50 percent.
  3. Run a 30-day contractor test before committing to a full-time role.
  4. Create a 30–60–90 day plan for any future hire.
  5. Decide whether your top bottleneck is support, product, or operations.
  6. Interview 3 founders who recently made their first hire, and ask what they regret.
  7. Assess runway impact with and without a hire.
  8. Delay hiring unless the role returns more time than it consumes.
  9. Build a lightweight onboarding doc now, even if you delay hiring.
  10. Set a “hire/no-hire” decision deadline to avoid analysis paralysis.

Final Thoughts

Hiring your first employee isn’t a milestone; it’s a commitment. It forces you to shift from the founder doing everything to the founder building a company. The founders who do this well don’t rush it, underprice it, or romanticize it. They run the numbers honestly, test before committing, and choose roles that multiply founder time. Start with clarity: what work is draining you, and what work accelerates the business? From there, run the math, test, then hire with confidence.

Photo by Eric Prouzet; Unsplash

About The Author

Hi, there. I am Lucas and I love to write about entrepreneurship, real estate, and people becoming success. I write about experts in these areas and what they are saying to help educate the U30 audience.

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