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Production Capacity Calculator

Free Tool

Production Capacity Calculator

Find out the maximum number of orders you can physically take per month — and how much revenue that represents at 50%, 75%, and 100% capacity. Plan your workload before you book it.

Production Capacity Calculator

Hours available for actual baking & decorating
Typical time to complete one order
Total Baking Hours/Month0 hrs
Max Orders Per Month0 orders
50% Capacity0 orders
$0
75% Capacity0 orders
$0
100% Capacity0 orders
$0
How It Works

Know Your Ceiling Before You Book.

1

Set Your Hours

Enter how many hours per week you have available for actual baking and decorating — not admin, not shopping, just the baking work itself.

2

Estimate Per-Order Time

How long does a typical order take you start to finish? Use your most common order type, or an average across your order mix.

3

Set Your Price

Enter your average selling price per order. This lets the calculator project your revenue potential at each capacity level.

4

See Your Capacity

The calculator shows your maximum orders per month and a revenue projection at 50%, 75%, and 100% capacity — so you can set goals you can actually hit.

Example Calculation

Part-Time Cake Baker — 20 Hours Per Week

Baking Hours Per Week20 hrs
Avg Hours Per Order4 hrs (custom cakes)
Weeks Per Month4.3
Total Hours Per Month86 hrs
Max Orders Per Month21 orders
Average Price Per Order$150
Revenue Potential
50% — 10 orders$1,500/mo
75% — 15 orders$2,250/mo
100% — 21 orders$3,150/mo
Most bakers operate at 70–80% to maintain quality and avoid burnout
Why This Matters

Overbooked Bakers Make Mistakes. Underbooked Bakers Miss Income.

Stop Overbooking

Knowing your ceiling means you can stop accepting orders when you’re full — and start a waitlist instead of delivering rushed, stressed work.

Set Revenue Goals Realistically

If your capacity at 100% is $2,500/month, you can’t set a $5,000/month goal without more hours or higher prices. This calculator shows you what’s actually possible so your goals are grounded in reality.

Find Your Sweet Spot

Most experienced bakers target 70–80% capacity — enough to maintain quality and leave room for a surprise big order, without running ragged every week.

Test Price Changes

If raising your average price by $20 lets you hit your income goal at 75% capacity instead of 100%, that’s a decision worth making. Run both scenarios and see the difference.

Made By A Real Baker

Marcia built this because she watched bakers say yes to everything and burn out — and also watched bakers set income goals that their hours couldn’t support. You need to know both ends of the range.

Completely Free

No login, no email, no credit card. Enter your hours, your average order time, and your price — and see your full capacity picture instantly.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I estimate hours per order?

Track a few orders start to finish — mixing, baking, cooling, decorating, packaging. Time them honestly, including cleanup. For most custom cookie orders that’s 2–4 hours; for sculpted cakes it can be 8–12 hours. Use the average for your most common order type.

What percentage of capacity should I run at?

Most experienced home bakers target 70–80%. Running at 100% every month leaves no room for re-dos, family events, sick days, or that one order that took twice as long as expected. Build in a buffer before you hit your ceiling.

Should I include admin time in my baking hours?

No — enter only the hours you actually spend baking and decorating. Admin hours (answering messages, posting on social, grocery shopping, bookkeeping) should be budgeted separately and are not part of your production capacity.

What if I take different types of orders with different times?

Use a weighted average. If you do 60% cookie orders at 3 hours and 40% cake orders at 5 hours, your weighted average is about 3.8 hours per order. That average gives you a more realistic capacity than using either number alone.

My max revenue at 100% is lower than my income goal. What do I do?

You have three levers: more hours, higher prices per order, or more efficient orders (shorter time per order). The fastest lever is usually price — use the Labor Rate Calculator and Profit Margin Calculator on this site to find the right price for your goals.

How is this different from the Break-Even Calculator?

Break-even tells you the minimum orders you need to cover your costs. This calculator tells you the maximum orders you can take given your available time. Use both together: make sure your break-even is below your 75% capacity mark. If it isn’t, your pricing or cost structure needs adjusting.

Want To Go Deeper?

Manage Your Capacity With BatterSuite

The calculator shows you your theoretical ceiling. BatterSuite shows you your actual capacity in real time — how many orders you have booked, what’s in production, and whether you have room to take another order this week.

Order calendar with production view
See open slots before saying yes to an order
Track actual time per order to improve estimates
Revenue tracking by week and month
BatterSuite
Bakery Management System
♡ Order calendar & scheduling
♡ Production tracking
♡ Revenue by week & month
♡ 7-day free trial, no credit card

Know What You Can Take On. Book It Right.

Use the calculator to find your capacity, then grab the Sweet Start Pricing Kit to make sure every order you book is priced to be worth your time.

Get The Free Kit