Commission Calculator
A sales commission calculator computes the variable compensation earned by sales professionals based on revenue generated, deals closed, or targets achieved. Commission is the primary incentive mechanism in sales organizations, directly aligning a salesperson's pay with business outcomes. Structures range from simple flat-rate percentages to complex tiered plans with accelerators, decelerators, draws, and clawbacks. Commission typically represents 40-60% of a field sales rep's On-Target Earnings (OTE), with the balance coming from base salary. Well-designed commission plans motivate revenue growth, reward top performers disproportionately, and discourage sandbagging or deal-quality shortcuts.
Commission = Sales Revenue x Commission Rate. For tiered plans: Total Commission = Sum of (Revenue in Tier_i x Rate_i) for each tier. Draw Against Commission: Net Payout = Earned Commission - Draw Amount (if recoverable).
- 1Determine the commission structure: flat rate (single percentage on all sales), tiered (escalating rates at revenue thresholds), or draw-based (guaranteed advance against future commissions).
- 2Identify the salesperson's quota (revenue target) for the period and the standard commission rate or rate schedule.
- 3Track total closed-won revenue during the commission period using CRM and billing data.
- 4For flat-rate plans, multiply total revenue by the commission rate to get the payout.
- 5For tiered plans, apply each tier's rate only to the revenue that falls within that tier's range, then sum all tiers.
- 6Apply any accelerators for above-quota performance — for example, revenue above 100% of quota might earn 1.5x the standard rate.
- 7Subtract any recoverable draw advances, clawbacks for churned deals, or holdbacks for uncollected invoices to arrive at the net commission payout.
At a flat 4% rate, every dollar of sales earns the same commission: $45,000 x 0.04 = $1,800. Simple flat-rate plans are transparent and easy to administer, commonly used in retail, insurance, and transactional sales roles.
The first $500,000 (100% of quota) earns 8%: $500,000 x 0.08 = $40,000. The remaining $200,000 above quota earns the accelerated 12% rate: $200,000 x 0.12 = $24,000. Total commission = $64,000. The accelerator rewards overperformance and discourages sandbagging deals into the next period.
The agent receives $3,000 (the draw amount) since earned commission ($2,200) is less than the draw. The $800 shortfall is carried forward as a debit. In Month 2, if the agent earns $4,500, the payout is $4,500 - $800 = $3,700. Recoverable draws function like interest-free loans during ramp-up.
Tier 1: $500,000 x 0.03 = $15,000. Tier 2: $500,000 x 0.04 = $20,000. Tier 3: $1,000,000 x 0.05 = $50,000. Total = $85,000. Progressive tiers reward high-volume agents and incentivize them to push beyond each threshold.
Payroll processing: Sales operations teams calculate and verify commission payments each pay period using CRM deal data and commission plan rules.
Sales compensation design: Compensation consultants model different rate structures and accelerator curves to find plans that incentivize desired behaviors within budget.
Job offer evaluation: Sales candidates compare OTE, commission rates, quota attainment data, and draw terms across competing offers to identify the best total compensation opportunity.
Territory planning: Sales leaders model the revenue and commission implications of realigning territories, adjusting quotas, or launching new products.
Financial forecasting: CFOs project variable compensation expense based on revenue forecasts and commission plan structures to build accurate operating budgets.
Commission Caps
Some plans impose a maximum commission payout regardless of performance. While caps reduce windfall payouts on unusually large deals, most compensation experts advise against them because they demotivate top performers at precisely the moment they are most productive and can cause reps to defer deals past the cap.
Multi-Year Deal Recognition
For multi-year contracts common in enterprise SaaS, commission may be paid fully at signing, in annual installments, or only on first-year ARR. Full recognition maximizes closing incentive but creates cash-flow risk if the customer churns. Partial recognition aligns payout with revenue delivery.
SPIFFs (Special Performance Incentive Funds)
SPIFFs are short-term bonuses for selling specific products, closing deals with certain attributes (e.g., multi-year terms), or hitting weekly micro-targets. They redirect sales focus toward strategic priorities without restructuring the entire commission plan and are typically paid in cash within the next pay cycle.
| Industry / Role | Commission Rate | OTE Split (Base/Variable) | Typical Deal Cycle |
|---|---|---|---|
| Real Estate Agent | 2.5-6% of sale price | 0/100 (all variable) | Weeks to months |
| Insurance Agent | 5-20% of premiums | Varies widely | Days to weeks |
| SaaS SMB AE | 8-12% of ARR | 50/50 | 30-90 days |
| SaaS Enterprise AE | 3-8% of ARR | 50/50 to 60/40 | 6-18 months |
| Pharmaceutical Sales | 5-15% of territory bonus | 70/30 to 80/20 | Quarterly cycles |
| Staffing/Recruiting | 15-25% of first-year salary | 40/60 | Days to weeks |
| Manufacturing/Distribution | 2-8% of revenue | 60/40 | Weeks to months |
| Financial Services Advisor | 0.5-1% AUM trail | Varies | Ongoing |
What is OTE (On-Target Earnings) and how does it relate to commission?
OTE is the total expected annual compensation — base salary plus target commission — when a salesperson achieves exactly 100% of their quota. For example, an OTE of $200,000 with a 50/50 split means $100,000 base salary and $100,000 in target commission. When evaluating job offers, ask what percentage of the team actually hits quota — if fewer than 50% do, the OTE may be aspirational.
What is the difference between recoverable and non-recoverable draws?
A recoverable draw is an advance that must be paid back from future commissions — if your commissions don't cover the draw, you owe the deficit. A non-recoverable draw guarantees a minimum payout: if commissions fall short, the employer absorbs the loss. Non-recoverable draws are more common during the first 3-6 months of employment.
How do clawbacks work in commission plans?
Clawbacks require salespeople to return commissions on deals that cancel, default, or churn within a specified period (typically 90-180 days). In SaaS, if a customer churns within the clawback window, the rep's commission is reversed. This aligns sales incentives with customer retention and discourages selling to poor-fit customers.
Are commission payments taxed differently than salary?
In the United States, commissions are classified as supplemental wages by the IRS. Employers may withhold federal income tax at the flat 22% supplemental rate (for amounts up to $1 million) or use the aggregate method. FICA taxes (Social Security and Medicare) apply at normal rates. State taxes vary by jurisdiction.
What is a typical commission rate for software sales?
SaaS commission rates typically range from 5-12% of Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR). SMB account executives often earn 8-12% while enterprise reps earn 3-8% on larger deal sizes. Rates are usually calibrated so that 100% quota attainment yields roughly 50% of total OTE.
How do split commissions work when multiple reps are involved?
When multiple salespeople contribute to a deal — such as an SDR who sourced the lead and an AE who closed it — the commission is split according to a predefined formula. Common splits are 70/30 or 80/20 in favor of the closer. Overlay specialists (e.g., solutions engineers) may receive a separate bonus rather than a commission split.
Pro Tip
Design your pay curve with three zones: a threshold (50-70% of quota) below which payouts are minimal, a linear zone through 100%, and an accelerated zone above target where each incremental dollar of sales earns more commission. This three-zone structure maximizes motivation across the entire performance distribution and makes sandbagging financially irrational.
Did you know?
Joe Girard holds the Guinness World Record for most cars sold by a single salesperson — 1,425 vehicles in a single year (1973), averaging nearly 6 cars per business day. His commission earnings at Chevrolet made him one of the highest-paid salespeople in American history, and he later earned even more as a motivational speaker teaching his sales techniques.