Staggered shifts: how they save money and ease the load
When not everyone starts at the same time, staffing follows demand. This guide shows where the saving comes from and how staggering also evens out the workload.

What staggering shifts means
Staggering means spreading shift start and end times evenly instead of having the whole team begin at exactly the same time. Demand rarely starts at full tilt the moment the doors open: it ramps up in steps. When start times are staggered to match demand, staffing lands where it is needed and you don't pay for overstaffing during the quiet moments.
Where the saving comes from
If the whole shift starts at once, some workers are on the clock while there isn't yet enough work for everyone. That is paid time that doesn't match real demand. Staggering the start times removes exactly this overstaffing: the same work gets done, but the hours land where the demand is.
Example calculation
Assumptions
- 12 workers on the morning shift
- Labour cost €22/h including on-costs
- Staggering removes on average 15 min of overstaffing per worker per day
- 250 open days a year
12 workers × 15 min = 3 hours a day
3 h × €22/h = €66 a day
€66 × 250 days = €16,500 a year
≈ €16,500 saved a year on a single shift
The example illustrates the mechanism. Your real saving depends on team size, pay level and the demand curve — run the numbers with your own figures.
The load eases too
Staggering isn't only about cost. When people don't all rush in and out at once, the crush at shift change and at opening evens out. Onboarding and settling into work happen calmly, peaks soften and the day is steadier. That shows in both the quality of work and in wellbeing.
How Smove staggers shifts
Smove proposes start times to match demand while keeping rest periods and collective-agreement rules in check. You see the labour cost in real time already while planning, so the benefit of staggering is visible before shifts are published.

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