Draw

A draw is a periodic advance against future commissions — a fixed guaranteed payment each pay period that stabilizes rep income during ramp-up, slow seasons, or long sales cycles. Recoverable draws create a balance the rep earns back through commissions; non-recoverable draws are absorbed by the company if commissions fall short. The draw is the foundational risk-sharing mechanism in variable compensation and one of the most misunderstood levers in plan design.

60–80%

Typical draw-to-variable ratio

$4K–$15K

Monthly draw range (field sales)

72%

Of variable guaranteed via NRD floor

Draw Balance & Earnings Over Time

DrawM1M2M3M4M5M6$2K$4K$6K$8KAmount ($)EarnedNet PayoutDraw Balance

Plan Language

Recoverable Draw Clause

Participant shall receive a monthly recoverable draw of $[AMOUNT] per month against earned incentive compensation. Earned commissions in each settlement period shall first be applied to reduce any outstanding draw balance before any net commission payment is made. Draw balances roll forward across periods within the plan year. At plan-year close, any unrecovered draw balance shall be [forgiven / carried forward to the next plan year]. Upon voluntary or involuntary separation, unrecovered draw balances are due and payable per applicable state law.

Non-Recoverable Draw Clause

Participant shall receive a non-recoverable draw of $[AMOUNT] per month, paid on months 1 and 2 of each fiscal quarter. If actual earned incentive for the quarter exceeds the total draw payments, the excess shall be paid in the month-3 settlement. If actual earned incentive is less than total draw payments, no month-3 payment shall be made and repayment of the draw shortfall will NOT be required. The non-recoverable draw constitutes a minimum income guarantee for the covered period.

Draw Termination and Recovery

Upon termination of employment (voluntary or involuntary), any unrecovered draw balance under a recoverable draw arrangement shall be deducted from the Participant's final compensation payment. If the final compensation payment is insufficient to cover the outstanding draw balance, the remaining balance shall be treated as a debt owed to the Company, recoverable per applicable state and federal law. In jurisdictions where draw recovery upon termination is restricted, the Company shall comply with local labor law requirements.

Formulas & Calculations

Draw Balance Tracking

// Per-period draw balance calculation
DRAW_PAID = MONTHLY_DRAW_AMOUNT
EARNED_COMMISSION = CREDITED_REVENUE * COMMISSION_RATE

NET_RECOVERY = MIN(EARNED_COMMISSION, PRIOR_BALANCE + DRAW_PAID)
ABOVE_DRAW = MAX(0, EARNED_COMMISSION - DRAW_PAID - PRIOR_BALANCE)
NEW_BALANCE = MAX(0, PRIOR_BALANCE + DRAW_PAID - EARNED_COMMISSION)

NET_PAYOUT = DRAW_PAID + ABOVE_DRAW

Annual Draw Economics

// Full-year draw analysis
ANNUAL_DRAW = MONTHLY_DRAW * 12
ANNUAL_EARNED = SUM(MONTHLY_COMMISSIONS)

// Recoverable: company exposure = MAX(0, ANNUAL_DRAW - ANNUAL_EARNED)
// Non-recoverable: company cost = ANNUAL_DRAW (always)
// Above-draw earnings = MAX(0, ANNUAL_EARNED - ANNUAL_DRAW)

DRAW_RATIO = MONTHLY_DRAW / (ANNUAL_VARIABLE_TARGET / 12)
// Target: 0.60 to 0.80 (motivating)
// Risk: > 1.00 creates ceiling effect
Draw Cash Flow Model — $4K/Month Recoverable Draw
MonthEarned CommDraw PaidRecovery AppliedDraw BalanceAbove-DrawNet Payout
M1$2,000$4,000$2,000$2,000$0$4,000
M2$3,000$4,000$3,000$3,000$0$4,000
M3$5,000$4,000$5,000$2,000$0$4,000
M4$6,500$4,000$6,000$0$500$4,500
M5$8,000$4,000$4,000$0$4,000$8,000
M6$7,000$4,000$4,000$0$3,000$7,000
Total$31,500$24,000$24,000$0$7,500$31,500

Scenarios

Well-Designed Draw Program

Medical device company sets recoverable draw at 70% of monthly variable target for new territory managers. Draw covers months 1-6 of ramp, with quarterly balance resets. 85% of new hires reach draw recovery by month 4. Annual write-off of unrecovered draw: $42K across 14 reps — less than recruiting cost of one replacement. Ramp attrition drops from 22% to 8%.

Poorly-Designed Draw Program

Company sets rolling recoverable draw at 100% of variable target with no reset. Three reps hit a bad Q1 and start Q2 with $12K-$18K negative balances. They realize they need months of above-quota performance just to see any commission beyond the draw. Two resign in Q2. The third stays but stops pursuing new accounts, focusing only on easy renewals to chip away at the balance — exactly the opposite of the behavior the comp plan was designed to drive.

Comparison

Draw TypeCash Flow PatternRep RiskCompany RiskBest For
RecoverableStable baseline; above-draw paid when balance clearsOwes balance if underperformsCapped to unrecovered amountNew territory reps, seasonal roles
Non-RecoverableGuaranteed monthly income; excess paid at settlementZero downsideAbsorbs full shortfallSenior leaders, strategic hires
Pure CommissionVolatile; depends on deal timingFull earnings riskZero (pays only actuals)High-volume, fast-cycle roles
Year-End GuaranteeBack-loaded annual floorLow (annual safety net)Annual floor exposureHybrid roles, first-year reps

Implementation Checklist

AI Prompt Template

Copy & paste into your AI assistant

You are a sales compensation analyst. I need to design a draw program for a [ROLE TYPE] with an OTE of $[AMOUNT] ([BASE/VARIABLE SPLIT]). Please: 1. Recommend recoverable vs non-recoverable draw with rationale 2. Calculate the optimal monthly draw amount (as % of variable) 3. Model a 6-month cash flow scenario at 80%, 100%, and 120% annual attainment pace 4. Identify the break-even month where draw balance typically clears 5. Flag state-level legal risks for draw recovery upon termination 6. Draft the draw clause for the compensation plan document

Case Study

Medical Device — Draw Redesign for Field Sales

A 180-rep medical device field sales organization was experiencing 28% first-year attrition among new territory managers. Exit interviews revealed the top reason: income volatility during the 6-9 month territory ramp period. The existing plan offered no draw — reps earned pure commission from day one. New hires in underdeveloped territories earned as little as $800/month in variable comp during months 1-3, despite $170K OTE. The comp team implemented a recoverable draw at 75% of monthly variable ($5,300/month) for the first 12 months, with quarterly balance resets. They modeled worst-case exposure at $380K annually (assuming 20% of new hires never fully recover), versus $1.2M annual cost of replacing 50+ reps.

First-year attrition dropped from 28% to 11%. Average time-to-full-productivity shortened by 6 weeks — reps prospected more aggressively when income anxiety was removed. Net draw write-off was $210K (below the $380K model), and the company saved an estimated $900K in recruiting and training costs.