Budget Planning Tool
clinical trial cost calculator
Clinical Trial Cost Calculator
A clinical trial cost calculator helps estimate the budget needed to plan and run a clinical study. It gives a structured cost projection based on your study design, number of sites, countries, enrolled participants, visits, study duration, and key cost assumptions.
Clinical trial budgets can be difficult to plan because costs come from many areas. Site startup, participant visits, monitoring, data management, technology, vendors, regulatory work, and contingency can all affect the final budget.
This calculator helps you organize those costs in one place. It is useful for sponsors, CROs, research teams, biotech companies, device companies, academic groups, and anyone preparing an early clinical trial budget.
The result is an estimate, not a final contract price. Actual costs can change based on the protocol, country requirements, vendor quotes, site contracts, patient population, amendments, recruitment speed, and regulatory needs.
What Is a Clinical Trial Cost Calculator?
A clinical trial cost calculator is a budgeting tool that estimates the total cost of a clinical study.
It uses the main drivers of clinical trial spending, such as:
- Trial phase
- Number of sites
- Number of countries
- Enrolled participants
- Visits per participant
- Study duration
- Screen failure rate
- Site startup costs
- Site management costs
- Monitoring costs
- Data management costs
- eClinical technology costs
- Lab, imaging, and supply costs
- CRO or management fees
- Overhead and contingency
- Inflation or escalation
The calculator then gives an estimated total budget and breaks the cost into categories. This makes it easier to see where the money is going.
Why Clinical Trial Budget Planning Matters
Clinical trials follow a study plan called a protocol. The FDA explains that clinical trial planning includes decisions such as who qualifies, how many people will be included, how long the study will last, what assessments will be done, and what data will be collected. Each of these choices can affect cost.
A clear budget helps research teams:
- Plan funding needs
- Compare study design options
- Estimate vendor costs
- Prepare sponsor discussions
- Review site feasibility
- Avoid missing major cost categories
- Understand monthly cash needs
- Build a realistic contingency reserve
A weak budget can cause delays, contract problems, underfunded sites, or unexpected change orders.
How the Clinical Trial Cost Calculator Works
This tool estimates the clinical trial budget by adding direct study costs first. Then it applies management fees, contingency, and inflation.
The calculator uses three main steps:
- Estimate operational and participant costs
- Add vendor, regulatory, and country-related costs
- Apply CRO fees, overhead, contingency, and inflation
The final result shows:
- Estimated total budget
- Cost per participant
- Cost per site
- Monthly burn rate
- Screened candidates needed
- Budget distribution
- Category-level cost breakdown
This gives a high-level budget view before detailed vendor quotes or site contracts are finalized.
Main Inputs Used in the Calculator
Study Design
The study design section includes the basic structure of the trial.
Important inputs include:
- Currency
- Trial phase
- Number of sites
- Countries
- Enrolled participants
- Visits per participant
- Study duration
- Screen failure rate
These inputs shape the size and complexity of the budget.
For example, a study with more sites and more countries usually needs more startup work, more monitoring, more contracts, and more regulatory coordination.
Trial Phase
Clinical trial phase affects cost because each phase has different goals, scale, and operational needs.
The FDA describes clinical trials as moving from early, smaller Phase 1 studies to larger Phase 3 studies. Phase 1 studies usually focus on safety and dosage, while later phases often involve more participants and broader evidence needs.
A Phase I estimate may have fewer participants than a Phase III trial, but it can still be expensive if the protocol includes intensive procedures, inpatient stays, frequent lab testing, imaging, or close safety monitoring.
Number of Sites
Sites are hospitals, clinics, research centers, or other locations where trial activities take place.
More sites can help recruitment, but they also increase costs such as:
- Startup fees
- Ethics or IRB fees
- Site management
- Monitoring
- Training
- Contracts
- Closeout work
In this calculator, site-related costs are calculated per site.
Number of Countries
Adding more countries can increase complexity. Each country may have different regulatory steps, ethics review processes, contracts, language needs, import rules, insurance requirements, or local vendor needs.
This calculator includes a country complexity cost for each additional country beyond the first.
Enrolled Participants
Enrolled participants are the people expected to enter the study after screening.
Participant count affects:
- Procedure costs
- Visit costs
- Stipends
- Lab costs
- Imaging costs
- Drug or device supply costs
- Data volume
- Monitoring effort
A higher participant count usually increases both direct and indirect costs.
Visits per Participant
Visits per participant show how many scheduled study visits each enrolled participant will complete.
This affects costs such as:
- Procedures
- Assessments
- Stipends
- Staff time
- Data collection
- Lab samples
- Imaging visits
A visit-heavy protocol can become expensive even with a small number of participants.
Study Duration
Study duration affects monthly costs.
Costs that usually depend on duration include:
- Site management
- Monitoring
- Data management
- eClinical technology
- CRO management
- Monthly vendor services
- Inflation or escalation
Longer studies often need a larger operating budget.
Screen Failure Rate
Screen failure rate is the percentage of candidates who are screened but do not enroll.
For example, if the screen failure rate is 20%, not every screened candidate will become an enrolled participant.
The calculator estimates screened candidates using this formula:
Screened candidates = Enrolled participants ÷ (1 − Screen failure rate)
Example:
120 ÷ (1 − 0.20) = 150 screened candidates
This means about 150 candidates may need to be screened to enroll 120 participants.
Key Cost Categories
Site Startup and Ethics
This includes startup cost per site and ethics or IRB fees.
The FDA explains that regulated clinical investigations generally require IRB review and approval, and the purpose of IRB review is to help protect the rights and welfare of research subjects.
In this calculator:
Site startup and ethics = Startup cost per site × Number of sites + Ethics/IRB fee per site × Number of sites
Example:
$18,000 × 8 + $3,500 × 8 = $172,000
Site Operations
Site operations include monthly site management costs.
Formula:
Site operations = Monthly site management per site × Number of sites × Study duration
Example:
$2,200 × 8 × 18 = $316,800
Screening Costs
Screening costs are based on how many candidates must be screened, not only how many are enrolled.
Formula:
Screening cost = Screened candidates × Screening cost per candidate
Example:
150 × $650 = $97,500
Participant Procedures
Procedure costs are based on enrolled participants and scheduled visits.
Formula:
Participant procedure cost = Enrolled participants × Visits per participant × Procedure cost per visit
Example:
120 × 6 × $850 = $612,000
Participant Stipends
Participant stipends may cover time, travel, or inconvenience payments, depending on the study and local rules.
Formula:
Participant stipend cost = Enrolled participants × Visits per participant × Stipend per visit
Example:
120 × 6 × $75 = $54,000
Monitoring
Monitoring helps protect participant safety and data reliability. ICH Good Clinical Practice says monitoring aims to ensure participants’ rights, safety, and well-being, as well as the reliability of trial results. It also notes that monitoring can include site monitoring and centralized monitoring, depending on the trial design.
Formula:
Monitoring cost = Monitoring per site per month × Number of sites × Study duration
Example:
$1,400 × 8 × 18 = $201,600
Data Management and eClinical Technology
Data management and technology may include EDC, ePRO, eConsent, CTMS, randomization systems, safety databases, data cleaning, database lock support, and reporting tools.
ICH Good Clinical Practice explains that systems and processes used for data capture, management, and analysis should be fit for purpose and support reliable results.
Formula:
Data and technology = (Data management per month + eClinical technology per month) × Study duration
Example:
($9,500 + $6,000) × 18 = $279,000
Clinical Vendors and Supplies
This section may include central lab, imaging, drug supply, device supply, and fixed vendor fees.
In this calculator, optional cost items can be included or excluded:
- Central lab
- Imaging
- Drug/device supply
Formula:
Clinical vendors and supplies = Central lab cost + Imaging cost + Drug/device supply cost + Vendor fixed costs
Example:
- Central lab: 120 × $1,200 = $144,000
- Imaging: 120 × $900 = $108,000
- Drug/device supply: 120 × $1,800 = $216,000
- Vendor fixed costs: $60,000
Total:
$144,000 + $108,000 + $216,000 + $60,000 = $528,000
Regulatory and Country Complexity
This includes fixed regulatory costs and additional country complexity costs.
Formula:
Regulatory and country complexity = Regulatory fixed cost + Additional country cost
If the study has only one country, there may be no additional country complexity cost.
Example:
$45,000 + $0 = $45,000
CRO or Management Fee
A CRO or study management fee may be applied as a percentage of the base study costs.
Formula:
CRO / management fee = Base study cost × CRO fee percentage
Example:
$2,305,900 × 15% = $345,885
Overhead and Contingency
Overhead and contingency help cover unexpected costs, administrative burden, amendments, vendor changes, delays, or cost increases.
Formula:
Overhead / contingency = Subtotal after CRO fee × Contingency percentage
Example:
$2,651,785 × 12% = $318,214
Inflation or Escalation
Inflation or escalation accounts for cost increases over time.
Formula:
Inflation / escalation = Subtotal after contingency × Annual escalation rate × Study duration in years
Example:
$2,969,999 × 4% × 1.5 years = $178,200
Example Clinical Trial Budget Estimate
Here is an example based on the calculator values:
| Input | Value |
|---|---|
| Trial phase | Phase I |
| Number of sites | 8 |
| Countries | 1 |
| Enrolled participants | 120 |
| Visits per participant | 6 |
| Study duration | 18 months |
| Screen failure rate | 20% |
| Screened candidates | 150 |
| Estimated total budget | $3,148,199 |
| Cost per participant | $26,235 |
| Cost per site | $393,525 |
| Monthly burn | $174,900 |
This estimate shows the total expected budget for a Phase I clinical trial with 120 enrolled participants across 8 sites over 18 months.
Example Cost Breakdown
| Category | Amount |
|---|---|
| Site startup and ethics | $172,000 |
| Site operations | $316,800 |
| Screening | $97,500 |
| Participant procedures | $612,000 |
| Participant stipends | $54,000 |
| Monitoring | $201,600 |
| Data and technology | $279,000 |
| Clinical vendors and supplies | $528,000 |
| Regulatory and country complexity | $45,000 |
| CRO / management fee | $345,885 |
| Overhead / contingency | $318,214 |
| Inflation / escalation | $178,200 |
| Estimated total budget | $3,148,199 |
This type of breakdown helps teams see which areas drive the budget. It also makes it easier to adjust assumptions and compare different trial designs.
What Is Monthly Burn?
Monthly burn is the estimated average cost per month during the study.
Formula:
Monthly burn = Estimated total budget ÷ Study duration
Example:
$3,148,199 ÷ 18 = $174,900
Monthly burn is useful for cash flow planning. It helps sponsors understand how much funding may be needed each month to keep the trial running.
What Is Cost per Participant?
Cost per participant shows the average budget for each enrolled participant.
Formula:
Cost per participant = Estimated total budget ÷ Enrolled participants
Example:
$3,148,199 ÷ 120 = $26,235
This number is helpful for comparing study scenarios, but it should not be treated as the exact cost of one participant. Some costs are fixed and do not change directly with enrollment.
What Is Cost per Site?
Cost per site shows the average budget across all active sites.
Formula:
Cost per site = Estimated total budget ÷ Number of sites
Example:
$3,148,199 ÷ 8 = $393,525
This helps compare site strategy options. For example, a study with fewer sites may reduce startup and monitoring costs, but it may also slow recruitment.
How Hybrid or Decentralized Visits Can Affect Cost
Hybrid and decentralized trial elements may reduce some visit-related costs. For example, fewer in-person visits may reduce procedure costs, participant stipends, travel support, or site workload.
However, decentralized methods can also add costs, such as:
- Remote technology
- Device shipping
- Telehealth setup
- Home health nursing
- Digital support
- Data integration
- Vendor management
This is why a hybrid visit reduction should be used carefully. It may reduce some costs but increase others.
Common Clinical Trial Budgeting Mistakes
Ignoring screen failures
A trial may need to screen more people than it enrolls. If screen failures are not included, the budget may be too low.
Underestimating site startup
Each site needs setup, training, documents, contracts, and ethics review. These costs can add up quickly.
Leaving out monitoring
Monitoring is a key quality activity in clinical trials. Reducing it without a clear risk-based plan can create quality and compliance concerns.
Forgetting technology fees
EDC, ePRO, eConsent, CTMS, randomization, and safety systems may have monthly fees, startup fees, or user fees.
Using one country assumption for a multi-country study
Additional countries may require more regulatory work, translations, insurance, import/export planning, tax review, and local support.
Not adding contingency
Clinical trials often change after planning. Amendments, recruitment delays, vendor changes, and inflation can affect the final cost.
Tips for Creating a Better Trial Budget
Use the calculator as a first planning step, then refine your budget with real quotes and protocol details.
Helpful tips:
- Start with the full protocol schedule of events
- Separate fixed costs from variable costs
- Include screen failures
- Review country-specific needs
- Check site startup and closeout costs
- Confirm vendor assumptions
- Add realistic contingency
- Update the budget after protocol amendments
- Review monthly burn before study launch
- Keep a clear record of all assumptions
A budget is stronger when every number has a reason behind it.
Who Can Use This Calculator?
This calculator can be useful for:
- Clinical trial sponsors
- Biotech companies
- Medical device companies
- CROs
- Research consultants
- Academic investigators
- Clinical operations teams
- Finance teams
- Grant planning teams
- Startup founders preparing trial budgets
It is best for early planning, scenario comparison, and budget discussions.
Limitations of This Calculator
This calculator gives a planning estimate. It does not replace a full clinical trial budget prepared by a qualified clinical operations, finance, regulatory, or CRO team.
The estimate may not include every possible cost, such as:
- Protocol writing
- Medical writing
- Investigator meetings
- Site closeout
- Safety reporting
- DSMB or adjudication committees
- Insurance
- Translation
- Legal review
- Patient recruitment campaigns
- Shipping and logistics
- Storage
- Import duties
- Taxes
- Audits
- Database lock activities
- Statistical analysis
- Clinical study report writing
Costs also vary by country, therapeutic area, study complexity, patient population, trial phase, and vendor selection.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a clinical trial cost calculator?
A clinical trial cost calculator estimates the total budget for a clinical study. It uses inputs such as sites, participants, visits, duration, screen failure rate, procedure costs, monitoring, data management, vendor costs, CRO fees, contingency, and inflation.
How do you calculate clinical trial cost?
Clinical trial cost is usually calculated by adding direct study costs, site costs, participant costs, vendor costs, regulatory costs, management fees, overhead, contingency, and inflation. The exact formula depends on the study design and budget model.
What is the biggest cost driver in a clinical trial?
The biggest cost driver depends on the trial. Common drivers include participant procedures, number of sites, study duration, monitoring, central lab, imaging, drug or device supply, recruitment, and CRO management fees.
How is screen failure rate used in trial budgeting?
Screen failure rate estimates how many candidates must be screened to enroll the target number of participants. If 20% of candidates fail screening and 120 participants must enroll, the calculator estimates 150 screened candidates.
Why does trial phase affect cost?
Trial phase affects cost because each phase has different goals, participant numbers, procedures, safety requirements, and operational complexity. FDA describes Phase 1 as focused on safety and dosage, while later phases involve broader safety and effectiveness questions.
Does this calculator include CRO fees?
Yes. The calculator includes a CRO or management fee as a percentage of the base study budget.
Does this calculator include inflation?
Yes. The calculator includes annual inflation or escalation based on the study duration.
Is this a final clinical trial budget?
No. This is an estimate for planning. A final clinical trial budget should be based on the protocol, vendor quotes, site contracts, regulatory requirements, and country-specific costs.
Disclaimer
This clinical trial cost calculator is for general budgeting and planning only. It provides estimated results based on the values entered by the user. It does not provide legal, regulatory, medical, financial, or clinical operations advice. Actual clinical trial costs may vary based on protocol design, country requirements, vendor pricing, site contracts, recruitment performance, amendments, inflation, taxes, insurance, and regulatory obligations. Always review your clinical trial budget with qualified clinical operations, finance, regulatory, legal, and study management professionals before making funding or study launch decisions.