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PTO Calculator.

Work out accrued vacation days, days remaining, and the hours equivalent in seconds. No sign-up. No email. Works for any annual leave policy — full-time, part-time, custom entitlement.

Your inputs

Results update as you type.

Your numbers

Accrued so far9.6days76.8 hours equivalent
Available right now9.6daysaccrued minus already used
Remaining for the year20daysentitlement minus already used
Daily accrual rate0.0548days/dayannual ÷ 365

Linear accrual model — every calendar day you accrue 0.0548 days. Some employers accrue per pay period or with a cap; for those, the result is still a close estimate.

How PTO accrual actually works

Most paid-time-off policies accrue linearly across the year — if your contract grants 20 days of vacation, you earn roughly 20 ÷ 365 ≈ 0.0548 days every calendar day. The intuition that "I have my full entitlement on day one" is wrong almost everywhere; what's actually true is "I have a claim on my full entitlement, but only a fraction of it is earned at any given moment".

Some employers use per-pay-period accrual instead — typically you earn annual ÷ 24 days on each semi-monthly paycheck. Others front-load the year (you have everything on January 1 but lose it on December 31), or cap accrual at a ceiling (so you can't bank more than, say, 1.5× your annual entitlement). For all of these the linear model this calculator uses is a reasonable approximation — what it can't capture is mid-year policy changes, unpaid leave gaps, or carry-over from prior years.

When does PTO "reset"?

It depends on the policy. Three common patterns:

  • Calendar year — accrual restarts January 1. Unused days either roll over capped, roll over uncapped, or expire.
  • Anniversary year — accrual restarts on your hire-date anniversary. Common in legacy HR systems and shops with a lot of mid-year hires.
  • Fiscal year — accrual restarts at the start of the company's fiscal year (often April 1 or July 1).

Part-time / prorated entitlement

Part-time staff usually get a prorated entitlement. If a full-time employee gets 20 days at 5 days/week, someone working 3 days/week gets 20 × (3 ÷ 5) = 12 days. Enter the prorated annual figure in the form above — the calculator handles the rest.

Why not just track this in a spreadsheet?

You can. Where spreadsheets break is when employees can request leave themselves, when approvers need to see conflicts before signing, and when year-end carry-over has rules. That's why HourSquare exists — balances, requests, approvals, and substitute search in one place, free for teams up to 10.

Tired of running this calculation by hand?

HourSquare keeps PTO balances live for every employee — they check their own days, request time off in the app, and the system flags substitute conflicts before the approver sees the request.

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Free for teams up to 10 · No card · No trial expiry

See also: Leave Management · Time Tracking · Pricing