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OEE Monitoring Systems

What Is Your OEE Really Costing You? The True Financial Cost of OEE Losses

Written By

Dasarathi G V

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Edited By

Sanjay
June 9, 2026

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8 Mins

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Two plant heads are discussing OEE at an industry event. One says his OEE is 68%. The other says his is 71%. Both nod, both look mildly satisfied.

Neither of them knows — in rupees — what the gap between their current OEE and a realistic target is costing them every month. Neither has ever calculated it.

That gap is the most important number nobody’s measuring. Because OEE as a percentage tells you how efficient you are. OEE in rupees tells you how urgently you need to fix it.

  • OEE losses have a direct financial cost — every lost percentage point represents real money in unproductive machine time
  • Cost of OEE loss = Lost production hours × Machine hour rate — a calculation every factory can do today
  • Availability, Performance, and Quality losses each cost money differently — and require different responses
  • Manual OEE reporting underestimates losses by 8–15 points — meaning real costs are higher than most factories believe
  • A 10-point OEE improvement on a 10-machine shopfloor can recover ₹1–3 lakhs/month in additional output capacity

What you’ll learn:

Why OEE needs to be measured in money not just percentage

OEE as a percentage is useful. It tells you the direction you’re moving and how you compare to benchmarks. But percentages are abstract. They don’t create urgency. They don’t help you prioritise competing improvement projects. And they’re almost impossible to use when justifying investment to a CFO or MD.

Money does all of those things. When a production manager can say “our 62% OEE on VMC-04 is costing us ₹2.1 lakhs a month in lost capacity” — that statement lands differently than “our OEE is below benchmark.” It creates priority. It quantifies the opportunity. And it builds the case for acting now rather than later.

The insight nobody talks about: 
OEE loss is not an abstract efficiency metric. It’s the cost of running a machine — paying depreciation, operator wages, electricity, and overheads — for time that produces zero saleable output. Every percentage point of OEE you’re losing is money already being spent with nothing to show for it.

Typical OEE Gap
25%

average gap between actual OEE and world-class 85% for Indian SME manufacturers

Hidden Loss
8–15pts

OEE points typically underestimated when using manual shift reports vs real-time capture

Recovery Potential
₹1–5L/mo

typical monthly output capacity recoverable per 10-machine shopfloor with 10pt OEE improvement

The OEE cost formula

The calculation is straightforward once you understand what OEE is measuring. If your OEE is 62%, it means 38% of your planned production time is being lost — to downtime, slow running, or rejections. That 38% has a cost.

OEE LOSS COST FORMULA
Daily Cost of OEE Loss = Planned Hours × (1 − OEE%) × Machine Hour Rate
Planned Hours = Total scheduled production time per day (e.g. 2 shifts = 16 hours)
OEE% = Your current OEE as a decimal (e.g. 62% = 0.62)
Machine Hour Rate = Total machine cost per hour (depreciation + operator + energy + overheads)
Your machine hour rate is the key input. It includes everything you’re paying to run that machine for one hour — regardless of whether it’s producing good parts or sitting idle. For a typical CNC machining centre in a mid-size Indian factory, this is usually between ₹600–₹1,500 per hour depending on machine value, shift pattern, and overhead allocation.

If you don’t have your machine hour rate: 
A quick estimate — take the machine’s annual fixed cost (depreciation + maintenance contract + operator salary + energy) and divide by annual planned production hours. That’s your hourly cost floor. The actual selling rate you charge customers per machine hour is often a useful proxy.

Worked example. what 62% OEE actually costs

Let’s make this concrete. Here’s a real-world calculation for a single VMC running two shifts:
EXAMPLE MACHINE
VMC-04 – 2-shift operation
Planned production time per day
16 hours
Current OEE
62%
Lost time (16 × 38%)
6.1 hours/day
Machine hour rate
₹800/hour
Daily cost of OEE loss
₹4,864/day
Monthly cost (26 working days)
₹1,26,464/month
That’s ₹15.2 lakhs per year being spent on machine capacity that produces nothing. And that’s from a single machine running at what many factories would consider a reasonable OEE. Now multiply that across your shopfloor.
FREE TOOL
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Enter your shift data and get your OEE score in seconds.
Then use the formula above to convert it into rupees.
Open OEE Calculator →

Cost breakdown by loss type — Availability, Performance, Quality

OEE losses don’t all cost the same way. Each of the three components creates a different kind of financial drain — and each requires a different response. Here’s how to think about the cost of each:
Availability Loss
The most visible cost
Downtime means zero output for a fixed cost. Every minute a machine is down, you're paying full machine hour rate for nothing. Breakdowns are easy to see — but changeover and setup time is also an availability loss that often goes uncosted.
Cost = Downtime (hrs)
× Machine Hour Rate
Performance Loss
The silent cost
The machine is running, so it feels productive. But if it's producing 22 parts/hour against a rated capacity of 30, you're losing 8 parts every hour — paid for at full machine cost. Performance losses are harder to see and chronically underreported in manual logs.
Cost = Lost Parts ×
(Machine Rate ÷ Ideal Parts/hr)
Quality Loss
The double cost
A rejected part costs you twice — the machine time to produce it and the material consumed. If it's sent for rework, add labour cost on top. Quality losses are often the smallest OEE component but carry disproportionate cost per unit lost.
Cost = Rejections ×
(Material + Machine Time per Part)

Scaling it across your entire shopfloor

The single-machine calculation becomes much more compelling when you apply it across your full shopfloor. Here’s what a 10-machine machining unit looks like at different OEE levels:
OEE Level Lost Hours/Day (10 machines, 16 hrs) Monthly Loss Cost @ ₹800/hr avg vs World-Class 85%
85% — World Class 24.0 hrs ₹49,920/month Baseline
75% — Good 40.0 hrs ₹83,200/month ₹33,280 more
65% — Developing 56.0 hrs ₹1,16,480/month ₹66,560 more
55% — Below average 72.0 hrs ₹1,49,760/month ₹99,840 more
45% — Critical 88.0 hrs ₹1,83,040/month ₹1,33,120 more

The real comparison: A factory running at 55% OEE vs 75% OEE on 10 machines is paying an extra ₹66,560 per month in unproductive machine cost. That’s ₹8 lakhs per year — with the same machines, the same operators, and the same overhead. The only difference is how much productive output those machines are generating.

OEE cost in high-mix vs high-volume factories

The 85% world-class benchmark was established for high-volume, repetitive manufacturing lines. For high-mix low-volume (HMLV) factories — job shops, machining units, custom component manufacturers — the cost picture is different.

HIGH-MIX LOW-VOLUME VS HIGH-VOLUME — KEY DIFFERENCES
High-Volume Manufacturing
  • OEE losses concentrated on a few critical machines
  • Changeover time is a small % of total planned time
  • Ideal cycle time is fixed and well-established
  • 85% OEE is a realistic target
  • Performance losses (speed) are the main lever
  • Cost per OEE point is predictable and consistent
High-Mix Low-Volume (Job Shops)
  • OEE losses spread across many machines and part types
  • Changeover time is a major availability loss — often 20–35%
  • Ideal cycle time varies by part — harder to standardise
  • 65–75% is often a more realistic target
  • Availability (changeover + setups) is the main lever
  • Cost per OEE point varies by machine and part mix
For HMLV factories, the most impactful OEE improvement isn’t necessarily fixing breakdowns — it’s reducing changeover and setup time. A job shop that cuts average changeover from 45 minutes to 20 minutes across 15 machine types can recover 2–4% OEE instantly — worth several lakhs per month at no capital cost.

HMLV practical tip: 
Track OEE per part number, not just per machine. In a high-mix shop, a machine might show 70% average OEE — but digging into it reveals 85% on some part types and 45% on others. The 45% jobs are where your cost is concentrated, and they often share a common root cause: poor setups, underspecified tooling, or difficult materials.

Why your OEE cost is probably higher than you think

Most factories calculate OEE from manual shift logs. And manual OEE is almost always optimistic — systematically, not randomly. Here’s why:

  • Small stops disappear. A 3-minute stoppage at 10:15 AM won’t make it into a log filled in at 6 PM. Real-time systems capture every stoppage. Manual logs don’t. Small stops typically account for 8–12% of a shift and are almost entirely invisible in paper-based reporting
  • Downtime gets rounded down. “About 20 minutes” gets recorded as 15. Across a shift with 5 stoppages, that’s 25 minutes of real downtime that vanishes from the log
  • Performance losses are invisible. If the machine ran slowly for 2 hours because of a worn tool, the operator records the output as “production was normal.” The speed loss never appears
  • Quality losses are underreported. Rework is often not classified as rejection. Startup scrap during changeovers is rarely tracked. Quality OEE is almost always overstated in manual systems
The implication: If your manually calculated OEE is 68%, your real OEE — measured with automated machine data — is likely closer to 55–62%. The cost difference between those two numbers, on a 15-machine shopfloor, can be ₹2–4 lakhs per month that nobody knows is being lost.

The ROI of a 10-point OEE improvement

Once you’ve calculated your cost of OEE loss, the ROI of improvement becomes a straightforward conversation. Here’s how to frame it:

1. Calculate current loss cost (as above)
Use the formula: Daily loss = Planned Hours × (1 − OEE%) × Machine Hour Rate. Multiply by 26 for monthly. Sum across all machines for shopfloor total.

2. Set a realistic improvement target
A 5–8 point improvement per quarter is achievable with focused effort and real-time data. Don’t target 85% immediately — target current OEE + 8 points. That’s your near-term financial opportunity.

3. Calculate the value of that improvement
Value recovered = (Improvement points ÷ 100) × Planned Hours × Machine Hour Rate × Working Days. Example: 8-point improvement on 10 machines at ₹800/hr running 16 hrs/day = 12.8 recovered hours/day = ₹10,240/day = ₹2.56 lakhs/month.

4. Compare to the cost of the monitoring tool
If a real-time OEE monitoring system costs ₹X/month and enables you to recover ₹2.56 lakhs/month — the payback period is a matter of weeks. This is the conversation that gets budget approved.

FREE TOOL
Calculate your ROI
Calculate your estimated production loss and uncover hidden capacity losses in just a few seconds.
Open ROI Calculator →

Stop estimating OEE. Start measuring the real cost.

Manual OEE is optimistic OEE. Leanworx captures every stoppage, every slow cycle, every rejection in real time — giving you the accurate OEE number that reveals what your losses are actually costing.
1

Real-time OEE — per machine, per shift, always accurate

No manual logs, no end-of-shift compilation. Every stoppage captured automatically — including the 3-minute small stops that disappear from paper forms.

2

OEE cost visibility — know the ₹ impact per machine

See OEE by machine, by shift, by part number. Cross-reference with your machine hour rate to understand which machines are your biggest cost leaks.

3

Six big losses breakdown — automatically classified

Every minute of OEE loss classified into Availability, Performance, or Quality — with Pareto analysis built in. No manual categorisation needed.

4

OEE trend over time — see if you're actually improving

Week-on-week, month-on-month OEE trends per machine. Know whether your improvement actions are working — or whether the same losses are recurring.

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FAQs:

1. How do you calculate the financial cost of OEE losses?

Cost of OEE loss = Planned Hours × (1 − OEE%) × Machine Hour Rate. For example: 16 planned hours per day × 38% lost (at 62% OEE) × ₹800/hour = ₹4,864/day = ₹1.26 lakhs/month on a single machine. Use the Leanworx OEE Calculator to calculate your score instantly, then apply this formula.

2. What are the three types of OEE losses and their financial impact?

Availability losses (downtime) cost you machine hour rate × downtime hours. Performance losses (slow running) cost you the revenue from parts you didn’t produce because the machine ran below ideal speed. Quality losses (rejections) cost you both the material and the machine time spent producing output you can’t sell — often the most expensive per unit.

3. What is the difference between OEE cost in high-mix vs high-volume manufacturing?

In high-volume factories, OEE costs are concentrated on a few critical machines and primarily driven by downtime and speed losses. In HMLV job shops, costs are spread across many machines and part types — and changeover time is often the biggest single availability loss. HMLV factories should track OEE per part number to find where cost is actually concentrated.

4. Why do most factories underestimate the cost of their OEE losses?

Manual shift reports miss small stops, round down downtime, and underreport performance losses. Real OEE captured automatically is typically 8–15 points lower than manually reported OEE — meaning the actual cost is significantly higher than most factories believe. A factory reporting 68% OEE manually might actually be running at 55–60%.

5. How does OEE relate to machine hour rate and profitability?

Machine hour rate is the fixed cost you pay per hour to run a machine — regardless of whether it’s producing or not. When OEE is low, you’re paying full machine hour rate for unproductive time. A 10-point OEE improvement recovers 1.6 hours of productive capacity per day on a 16-hour shift — at zero additional fixed cost, since the machine was already paid for.

6. What is a realistic OEE improvement target and what financial return can I expect?

A realistic target is 5–8 OEE points per quarter with focused improvement effort. On a 10-machine shopfloor at ₹800/hr average and 16-hour shifts, an 8-point improvement recovers approximately 12.8 productive hours/day across the shopfloor = ₹2.56 lakhs/month in additional output capacity — from the same machines, same headcount, same overheads.

Author

Dasarathi G V
Dasarathi has extensive experience in CNC programming, tooling, and managing shop floors. His expertise extends to the architecture, testing, and support of CAD/CAM, DNC, and Industry 4.0 systems.

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