Overbooking math.
If your no-show rate is 23%, you should NOT overbook by 23%. The correct answer is 14 to 16%. Here is why, and the calculator to find your number.
Overbook calibration
Enter your no-show rate and slot count to find your safe overbook level.
safe overbook = no-show rate × 0.65
Why 60 to 70%, not 100%
If you overbook by your full no-show rate, you are assuming that no-shows occur at exactly their average rate every day. They do not. No-shows follow a binomial distribution. Some days your attendance is 90% of scheduled, some days 110%.
At 23% no-show rate, 20-slot schedule:
The 60 to 70% calibration keeps you within 1 to 2 patients of capacity on worst-case attendance days approximately 95% of working days. The remaining 5% are collision days requiring triage.
- +High-volume primary care (20+ slots/day)
- +Practices with a triage protocol for overflow
- +Settings with flexible waiting room capacity
- +Airlines, bus lines, and hotel environments
- xBehavioral health and therapy practices
- xSpecialist appointments with long slot times
- xSurgical and procedure-based practices
- xAny setting where overflow cannot be triaged
Alternatives to overbooking
Lower risk than overbooking. Only fills slots when they actually open.
Reserve 10 to 15% of slots for same-day booking. Same-day appointments have very low no-show rates.
Reduce your no-show rate so overbooking becomes less necessary.