What is SDR Capacity Planning?
SDR capacity planning is the process of working out how many sales development reps your team needs to generate a target amount of pipeline — not just now, but over time as new hires ramp up. It sits at the intersection of hiring, revenue operations, and quota-setting, and it is one of the most commonly botched calculations in B2B sales.
Most headcount plans treat SDRs as interchangeable units: "we need $5M in pipeline per quarter, each SDR generates $600k, so we need 9 SDRs." That math ignores three real-world haircuts: attainment (most SDRs don't hit 100% of quota), ramp (new SDRs generate less pipeline in their first months), and churn (SDRs leave, resetting the ramp clock).
A proper capacity model accounts for all three. This calculator handles attainment and ramp — the two variables you can directly plan around.
Pipeline target vs. pipeline needed
Note that the calculator asks for your pipeline target, not your revenue target. These are different. If your team needs to close $1M in revenue and your win rate is 25%, you need $4M in pipeline — that is a 4× coverage ratio. The calculator lets you set the coverage multiplier so the math flows through correctly from revenue to pipeline to SDR count.
The Ramp Problem — Why Headcount Doesn't Equal Capacity
If you hire 10 SDRs today, you do not have 10 SDRs' worth of pipeline capacity — not for several months. The ramp gap is the single biggest miscalculation in SDR team planning.
How ramp eats into capacity
A new SDR in month 1 is learning the product, ICP, objections, and toolstack. Even the most talented hire is generating perhaps 30–50% of a fully-ramped SDR's output during this period. If 20% of your 10-person team was hired in the last 60 days, you are effectively running at 8.5–9 FTE equivalents of pipeline capacity, not 10.
That 10–15% gap compounds. It compounds month over month when you miss pipeline targets, when AEs are starved of opportunities, and when leadership responds by demanding more hiring — which adds more ramping reps, which temporarily makes the capacity problem worse before it gets better.
The ramp discount formula
The calculator applies a ramp discount to your total available capacity:
capacity_factor = 1 − (ramp_pct_of_team / 100) × (1 − ramp_capacity / 100)
So if 20% of your team is ramping at 50% capacity, your capacity factor is 1 − (0.20 × 0.50) = 0.90. Every SDR on paper is only delivering 90 cents of pipeline per dollar of quota. Divide your pipeline target by that factor and you see the true headcount floor.
Why this matters for planning
If you hire to meet a pipeline target with no ramp discount, you will consistently come up short — especially in growth phases when a large fraction of your team is always new. Building the ramp discount into your model is what separates tactical hiring (react when pipeline is already short) from strategic capacity planning (hire ahead of the shortfall).
How to Use the SDR Capacity Calculator
Step 1 — Set your pipeline and deal parameters
Enter your monthly pipeline target in dollars. If you think in quarterly numbers, divide by 3. Then set your average deal size and pipeline coverage ratio. The coverage ratio is how many dollars of pipeline you need per dollar of revenue target — a standard starting point is 3×, but this varies widely by win rate and sales cycle length. Finally, set your expected quota attainment rate — what fraction of their quota does the typical SDR actually hit? B2B median is around 70–75%.
Step 2 — Set SDR quota and current headcount
Enter your SDR monthly quota — this is the pipeline-generated target per rep, not a revenue or bookings target. Then enter your current SDR headcount. The calculator uses this to show you the pipeline gap between what your current team can produce and what you need.
Step 3 — Configure ramp
Set ramp period (how many months to full productivity), ramp capacity (what fraction of full quota a ramping SDR generates — 50% is typical), and % of team currently ramping. If you hired aggressively in the last quarter, this number may be 30–40%. Steady-state teams see 10–20%.
Step 4 — Read the outputs
The calculator shows SDRs needed (with ramp accounted for), fully-ramped equivalent (the number you'd need if every rep was at full productivity), your effective quota per SDR after attainment discount, and the pipeline gap at your current headcount. Use the gap figure to prioritize and time your hiring plan.
SDR Benchmarks: Quota, Ramp Time, and Attainment Rates (2025–2026)
These benchmarks reflect B2B SaaS and services market data from 2025–2026. Use them as a reality check when setting your calculator inputs — and override them if your internal data differs consistently.
- $150k–$250k / month Median SDR quota in pipeline generated. Lower ACV products ($10k–$20k ACV) sit at the low end; enterprise SDRs targeting $100k+ ACV sit at $200k–$300k. SDR pipeline quota
- 65–75% attainment Median across B2B SaaS. Top-quartile teams see 80%+; teams with ICP drift or poor coaching see 50–60%. Plan for 70% if you don't have data. Quota attainment rate
- 3–4 months to full ramp Median across B2B. Technical products, complex ICP, or enterprise sales motions extend this to 4–6 months. PLG / high-velocity SMB can be 6–8 weeks. Ramp period
- 40–60% capacity during ramp Typical SDR in months 1–3 generates 40–60% of their steady-state output. This includes both the learning curve and lower list quality (best lists go to ramped reps). Ramp capacity
- 15–25% of team typically ramping At steady-state hiring velocity. Hypergrowth teams (doubling headcount in 12 months) often see 30–40% of the team in ramp at any given point. Ramp % of team
- 18–24 months median SDR tenure Meaning your ramp investment (3–4 months) represents 15–20% of the rep's productive life before churn. This is why faster ramp programs have outsized ROI. Tenure consideration
What these benchmarks mean for headcount planning
If you run the numbers at median — 70% attainment, 20% of team ramping at 50% capacity — your effective capacity is about 63% of headcount × quota. A team of 10 SDRs with a $200k quota each generates roughly $1.26M in pipeline, not $2M. This is why most pipeline plans miss, and why the "just hire more SDRs" response to a pipeline shortfall takes 3–4 months to actually show up in results.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many SDRs do I need to hit my pipeline target?
Divide your monthly pipeline needed (target × coverage ratio) by each SDR's effective quota (nominal quota × attainment rate), then inflate for ramp. If 20% of your team is ramping at 50% capacity, your capacity factor is 0.90 — so divide the effective-quota denominator by 0.90 to get true headcount needed. The calculator does all of this automatically.
What is a realistic ramp time for an SDR in 2025–2026?
Median B2B ramp for an SDR is 3–4 months. Complex enterprise products (high ACV, technical buyers) extend this to 4–6 months. PLG or high-velocity SMB products can see full ramp by month 2. The key variable is not time-in-seat but time-to-first-qualified-pipeline — the best onboarding programs compress that window through structured ICP shadowing and deal coaching in weeks 1–4.
What SDR quota is realistic in 2025–2026?
Median SDR quota in B2B SaaS is $150k–$250k in monthly pipeline generated. Lower-ACV, high-velocity products sit at the bottom of that range; enterprise SDRs with smaller lists and longer cycles sit higher. Attainment rates cluster around 65–75% — so plan for effective quota around 60–70% of the headline number when building your capacity model.
Why does ramp time matter so much for headcount planning?
A team of 10 SDRs where 30% are still ramping at 50% capacity is effectively running at 8.5 FTE equivalents — not 10. That 15% gap compounds when you're trying to hit a fixed pipeline target. Headcount planning that ignores ramp consistently underestimates how many hires are needed and delays the response cycle, because by the time the miss is visible, you need to hire and wait another 3–4 months for productivity.