Employee Net Promoter Score (eNPS) Calculator
Enter how many employees chose each score (0–10) for recommending your company as a place to work
eNPS
0
Fair
Frequently asked questions about eNPS
eNPS stands for Employee Net Promoter Score. It measures how likely your employees are to recommend your company as a great place to work, using a simple 0–10 scale. It's an adaptation of the customer-facing NPS framework, applied internally to gauge employee loyalty, engagement, and overall sentiment toward the organization. A single question: "How likely are you to recommend this company as a place to work?" — gives you one of the most actionable metrics in HR and people operations.
Employees are grouped into three categories based on their score:
- Promoters (9–10): Highly engaged employees who would actively recommend your company
- Passives (7–8): Satisfied but not enthusiastic, they're neutral and excluded from the formula
- Detractors (0–6): Disengaged or unhappy employees who would not recommend your company
The formula is: eNPS = % Promoters − % Detractors
Example: If you survey 100 employees and get 60 Promoters, 25 Passives, and 15 Detractors:
- % Promoters = 60%
- % Detractors = 15%
- eNPS = 60 − 15 = +45
Enter the number of Promoters, Passives, and Detractors from your employee survey into the fields above (by count per 0–10 score). The calculator instantly computes your eNPS score, displays it on a gauge from −100 to +100, and shows the percentage breakdown of each group — no spreadsheet or manual math needed.
eNPS scores range from −100 to +100. Here's how to interpret yours:
| Score Range | Rating | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| 50 to 100 | Excellent | Strong employee advocacy and engagement |
| 20 to 49 | Good | Healthy workplace with room to grow |
| 0 to 19 | Fair | More Promoters than Detractors, but improvement needed |
| Below 0 | Poor | Detractors outnumber Promoters — action required |
Industry context matters. A score of +20 in a large enterprise may be impressive, while a fast-growing startup might aim for +50 or above. Use your score as a baseline and focus on the trend over time.
NPS (Net Promoter Score) measures how likely your customers are to recommend your product or service. eNPS applies the same methodology internally, asking employees whether they'd recommend your company as a place to work. Same formula, completely different audience and use case. NPS is a CX metric; eNPS is an HR and culture metric.
| Metric | Audience | Measures | Best Used For |
|---|---|---|---|
| eNPS | Employees | Likelihood to recommend company as employer | Quarterly employee engagement pulse |
| CSAT | Customers | Satisfaction with a specific interaction | Post-purchase or post-support feedback |
| CES | Customers | Ease of completing a task or interaction | After support or onboarding touchpoints |
eNPS is your internal health check; CSAT and CES are your external customer experience metrics.
Most companies run eNPS surveys quarterly or biannually, frequent enough to spot trends, but not so often it creates survey fatigue. Key moments to measure eNPS:
- During quarterly HR pulse checks
- After significant company changes (restructuring, leadership change, new policies)
- Following major milestones (product launches, layoffs, acquisitions)
- At the end of onboarding for new hires (to capture early sentiment)
Avoid running eNPS too frequently — monthly surveys tend to lower response rates and reduce the candor of answers.
Passives (scores 7–8) are satisfied but not loyal enough to actively advocate for or against your company. Including them would dilute the signal from your most enthusiastic and most disengaged employees. The eNPS formula is designed to highlight the gap between your strongest advocates and your most at-risk employees, which is where the most actionable insight lives. Passives still matter for context (a high Passive count often means there's untapped potential), but they don't affect the core score.