How to do capacity planning for project teams
TL;DR
Capacity planning helps project teams determine whether future work fits within available time and skills.
It compares expected workload with team availability before commitments are made.
Effective capacity planning prevents overbooking, missed deadlines, and burnout.
The process should be lightweight, repeatable, and reviewed regularly as plans change.
Table of Contents
What capacity planning means for project teams
Capacity planning for project teams is the process of checking whether upcoming work can realistically be delivered with the available people, time, and skills.
It answers questions such as:
- Do we have enough capacity for planned projects?
- Where will overload occur if nothing changes?
- Should we adjust timelines, scope, or staffing?
The goal is not perfect accuracy, but early visibility.
What inputs do you need for capacity planning
Before planning capacity, teams need a small set of inputs.
1. Expected workload
This includes:
- Planned projects and initiatives
- Rough effort estimates
- Delivery timeframes
- Required roles or skills
Estimates can be high level. Precision is less important than consistency.
2. Team availability
Capacity planning should account for:
- Working hours per person
- Part-time schedules
- Planned vacations and holidays
- Non-project work, such as meetings or support
Ignoring availability is one of the most common planning errors.
3. Planning horizon
Teams should define:
- How far ahead they plan (for example, 4 weeks or 3 months)
- The level of detail needed at each horizon
Short-term plans tend to be more detailed than long-term ones.
Step-by-step capacity planning process
A simple, repeatable process looks like this:
Step 1: List upcoming work
Capture all known projects and commitments within the planning horizon.
Step 2: Estimate effort
Estimate how much effort each project requires over time.
Use ranges if uncertainty is high.
Step 3: Map available capacity
Calculate available capacity per person or role, factoring in time off and non-project work.
Step 4: Compare demand vs capacity
Identify:
- Overloaded periods
- Underutilized capacity
- Critical bottlenecks
Step 5: Adjust plans
Resolve gaps by:
- Moving timelines
- Rebalancing work
- Reducing scope
- Adding capacity if needed
Capacity planning is only useful if it leads to decisions.
How often should capacity planning be done
Most teams review capacity:
- Weekly for near-term delivery
- Monthly or quarterly for staffing visibility
Plans should be updated whenever priorities change.
Common capacity planning mistakes
Teams struggle with capacity planning when they:
- Treat plans as fixed commitments
- Ignore non-project work
- Plan at task-level too early
- Rely on outdated spreadsheets
- Do planning once instead of continuously
Capacity planning works best as an ongoing habit.
When capacity planning becomes critical
Capacity planning becomes essential when:
- Multiple projects run in parallel
- People are shared across teams or clients
- Deadlines start slipping unexpectedly
- Burnout becomes a recurring issue
- Hiring decisions depend on future demand
At this stage, reactive planning is no longer sufficient.
Frequently asked questions
How accurate do capacity plans need to be?
They do not need to be exact. Directional accuracy and early warning are more important than precision.
Can capacity planning be done without time tracking?
Yes. Capacity planning is based on expected work and availability, not historical timesheets.
Should capacity planning be done per person or per role?
Early planning often works better at role level. As delivery approaches, plans usually become more granular.
Sources
PMI library: Capacity planning and resource management
https://www.pmi.org/learning/library/resource-leveling-scheduling-projects-6007
Atlassian: Capacity planning for project teams
https://www.atlassian.com/work-management/project-management/capacity-planning
IBM: Capacity planning overview
https://www.ibm.com/topics/capacity-planning
Planta glossary: Capacity planning explained
https://plantapp.io/glossary/capacity-planning/