DEV Community

Erik anderson
Erik anderson

Posted on • Originally published at primeautomationsolutions.com

Managed IT vs In-House IT: Real Cost Breakdown for Small Businesses

Most articles comparing managed IT to in-house IT are written by managed IT companies. They cherry-pick numbers that make outsourcing look like the obvious choice. The reality is more nuanced. Sometimes in-house is the right call. Sometimes managed IT saves you six figures. The answer depends on your company size, complexity, and growth trajectory.

    Here are the real numbers, pulled from current salary data and actual managed IT contracts — not marketing brochures.
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

The Real Cost of In-House IT

    When business owners think about hiring IT staff, they think about salary. But salary is only 60-70% of the total cost. Benefits, taxes, training, tools, and infrastructure add up fast.




          Line Item
          Low End
          High End




          IT Manager salary + benefits (30%)
          $110,000
          $156,000


          Help Desk Technician salary + benefits
          $58,000
          $84,000


          Infrastructure (servers, software, licenses)
          $15,000/yr
          $40,000/yr


          Training and certifications (per person)
          $3,000/yr
          $8,000/yr


          Total (2-person IT team)
          $186,000/yr
          $288,000/yr




    That is the cost of a minimal two-person IT team. You get coverage during business hours, expertise limited to two people's skill sets, and zero redundancy when someone takes vacation or quits. If your IT manager leaves, you are looking at 2-4 months of recruiting and ramp-up time where your infrastructure is running on hope.
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

The Real Cost of Managed IT

    Managed IT providers typically charge per user per month. The pricing varies based on what is included, but here is the realistic range for comprehensive managed IT services in 2026.




          Company Size
          Per-User Cost
          Annual Total




          25 employees
          $125-250/user/mo
          $37,500 - $75,000


          50 employees
          $125-250/user/mo
          $75,000 - $150,000


          100 employees
          $100-200/user/mo
          $120,000 - $240,000




    That pricing typically includes: 24/7 helpdesk support, proactive monitoring and alerting, patch management, security (endpoint protection, email filtering), backup and disaster recovery, and vendor management. Some providers charge extra for projects like office moves, new system deployments, or major upgrades.
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

When In-House Makes Sense

    In-house IT is the right choice in specific circumstances. Do not let a managed IT salesperson tell you otherwise.


      - **Highly regulated industries.** If you are in healthcare, finance, or government contracting, your compliance requirements may demand dedicated IT staff who understand your regulatory environment deeply. HIPAA, SOX, CMMC, and FedRAMP compliance requires institutional knowledge that is hard to outsource.
      - **100+ employees.** At this scale, the per-user cost of managed IT starts approaching the cost of a dedicated team, and you gain the benefit of institutional knowledge and faster response times for on-site issues.
      - **Custom development needs.** If your business requires ongoing custom software development — internal tools, integrations, proprietary systems — you need developers on staff. Managed IT providers handle infrastructure, not development.
      - **IT is your core product.** If you are a technology company, your IT team is not overhead — it is your product team. Outsourcing that makes no sense.
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

When Managed IT Makes Sense

      - **Under 100 employees.** The math is straightforward. A 50-person company paying $150/user/month spends $90,000/year on comprehensive IT coverage. Hiring a two-person team costs $186,000-$288,000 and provides less coverage.
      - **Standard tech stack.** If your company uses Microsoft 365, standard networking equipment, and common business applications, managed IT providers can support you efficiently because they manage hundreds of similar environments.
      - **Need for 24/7 coverage.** A two-person in-house team gives you 8/5 coverage at best. Managed IT providers staff a NOC around the clock. If your business operates outside normal hours or if downtime at 2 AM costs real money, this matters.
      - **Cannot afford $200K+ per year for IT staff.** Many small businesses simply do not have the budget for in-house IT. Managed IT gives them enterprise-grade support at a fraction of the cost.
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

The Hybrid Model

    The smartest small businesses I work with use a hybrid approach: managed IT for day-to-day operations plus a fractional CTO or IT consultant for strategy.

    The managed IT provider handles helpdesk tickets, monitoring, patching, security, and backups. The fractional CTO (typically 5-10 hours/month at $150-250/hour) handles technology strategy, vendor evaluation, major projects, and acts as the point of contact between the business and the managed IT provider.

    This gives you the cost efficiency of managed IT with the strategic oversight of a senior technology leader. Total cost for a 50-person company: $90,000-$150,000/year for managed IT plus $9,000-$30,000/year for fractional CTO. Still well below the cost of building an in-house team.
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Decision Matrix

          Factor
          In-House
          Managed IT
          Hybrid




          **Company Size**
          100+
          Under 50
          50-150


          **Annual IT Budget**
          $200K+
          $40K-$150K
          $100K-$200K


          **Tech Complexity**
          High / Custom
          Standard
          Mixed


          **Growth Rate**
          Stable / Slow
          Fast / Variable
          Moderate


          **Compliance Needs**
          Heavy
          Standard
          Moderate




    The right answer is not about ideology. It is about math. Run the numbers for your specific situation, factor in the hidden costs on both sides, and make the decision based on total cost of ownership — not just the sticker price.
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Originally published at https://primeautomationsolutions.com

Top comments (0)