The short answer

At 10 to 20 people, a spreadsheet can no longer keep up with real approvals, clashes and accurate balances. A dedicated tracker is the right tool, and our pick is Book Time Off at a flat £1 per user / month: self-service requests, one-click approvals, a maximum-absent limit so too many people cannot be off at once, automatic UK bank holidays, and a shared calendar every manager can see. A team of 20 is £20 a month, with a 30-day free trial and no card.

What changes between 10 and 20

The job itself does not change, but the volume and the cost of mistakes do. Three things in particular start to matter:

The must-haves at this size

For a team under 20, look for a planner that covers all of these:

Clash control is the upgrade that matters most here

The single biggest reason teams of this size move off a spreadsheet is to stop double-booked weeks. A maximum-absent limit turns that from a manual check into an automatic rule.

Why Book Time Off fits

Book Time Off was built for UK teams of roughly this size. It covers the must-haves above in one flat plan:

If you are weighing it against the established names at this size, see Book Time Off vs Timetastic and the best annual leave tracker ranking.

Stop the double-booked weeks

Set a maximum-absent limit, approve requests in one click, and see your whole team's leave at a glance. 30 days free, no card required.

Start free trial

What it costs

A flat £1 per user / month, no minimum, no contract:

Team sizePer monthPer year
12 people£12£144
15 people£15£180
19 people£19£228

Best for and not best for

✓ Best for

  • UK teams of roughly 10 to 20 people
  • Anyone past the point a spreadsheet can cope
  • Teams that need clash control and real approvals
  • Mixed full-time and part-time staff

Look elsewhere if you need

  • A separate counted-down balance for every leave type
  • Per-person working-day patterns (the week is company-wide)
  • Full HR: documents, onboarding, performance, payroll
  • A public API for two-way integration

Frequently asked questions

What is the best holiday planner for a team of 10 to 20?

At this size you need real approvals, clash control and accurate balances, which a spreadsheet struggles to provide. A dedicated tracker is the right tool, and our pick is Book Time Off at a flat £1 per user per month: self-service requests, one-click approvals, a maximum-absent limit so too many people cannot be off at once, automatic UK bank holidays and a shared calendar. Timetastic and Leave Dates are the other strong dedicated options.

Why do holiday spreadsheets fail at around 20 people?

With 10 to 20 people, several need to request, approve and edit leave at once, so versions clash and changes get lost. There is no real approval step, no alert when two people book the same week, and the remaining-days maths is easy to break. Add part-timers and manual bank holidays and the file becomes a job in itself. Dedicated software removes all of that for a few pounds per person a month.

How do I stop too many people booking the same week?

Use a tool with a capacity limit. In Book Time Off you set a maximum-absent limit per department, so once that many people are off on a date, further requests are flagged or blocked. You can also set blocked or blackout dates for busy periods. That turns clash control from a manual check into an automatic rule, which matters most as a team grows past 10.

How does a holiday planner handle part-time staff and bank holidays?

You set each part-timer's allowance as a pro-rated number of days, and the planner counts their remaining days against it automatically. Book Time Off loads UK bank holidays from the GOV.UK feed for the right nation and never deducts them from allowance. It uses a company-wide working week rather than per-person working-day patterns, so set part-time allowances as a pro-rated total.

How much does holiday software cost for a team of 20?

Dedicated trackers are inexpensive at this size. Book Time Off is a flat £1 per user per month with no minimum, so a team of 20 is £20 a month, or £240 a year, with a 30-day free trial and no card. That includes approvals, clash control, UK bank holidays, Slack and Teams, and reporting, features some rivals reserve for a pricier tier.

About this guide

Written by the Book Time Off editorial team. We build Book Time Off, the tracker recommended here, and have been upfront about that, including a clear list of what it does not do. Book Time Off features and pricing are verified in the live product as of 16 June 2026.