EBITDA Margin Calculator -- Margin Analysis | LazyTools
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EBITDA Margin Calculator

Calculate EBITDA margin from EBITDA and revenue, or build EBITDA from revenue, COGS, operating expenses and D&A. Shows EBITDA margin vs sector benchmark, the implied EV at a given multiple per 1pp margin improvement, and the full gross-to-EBITDA margin waterfall.

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Enter directly, or use the fields below to build up from income statement.
For gross margin comparison.
For 1pp margin improvement EV impact.
📈 Enter revenue and EBITDA, then click Calculate
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Calculate EBITDA from net income, interest, tax and D&A -- or from EBIT and D&A -- with the full EBITDA Calculator.
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Key features

Why use the LazyTools calculator?

Built around gaps in competitor tools -- professional-grade analysis for investors, analysts and business owners.

📈
EV impact of margin improvement
Shows the enterprise value created by each additional percentage point of EBITDA margin at your sector multiple -- the clearest possible case for operational improvement initiatives.
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Gross-to-EBITDA margin waterfall
When gross profit is entered, displays the step from gross margin to EBITDA margin, showing how operating overhead consumes gross profit.
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Six-sector EBITDA benchmark
Compare your margin against software, healthcare, manufacturing, retail, distribution and services sector averages with a single result.
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Six-industry benchmark
Select your sector and compare against peer averages instantly.
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Formula working
Full substituted formula shown with every result for verification.
Free, no signup
Completely free. Runs in your browser. No data sent to servers.
How to use

How to use this calculator

1
Enter figures
Type revenue and EBITDA, and optionally gross profit and sector multiple into the labelled fields using the same reporting period throughout.
2
Verify sources
Cross-check against the correct financial statement.
3
Click Calculate
Instant result with formula, metrics and interpretation.
4
Read interpretation
Plain-English explanation with any concern flags.
5
Benchmark
Compare to sector, then track trends over time.
Feature comparison

How we compare to alternatives

FeatureLazyToolsOmniCalcInvestopediaWall St Mojo
EV impact + margin waterfallYesNoNoNo
Industry benchmarkYesNoNoNo
Step-by-step formulaYesPartialYesPartial
Interpretation guideYesPartialYesNo
Multi-modeYesPartialNoNo
Free, no signupYesYesYesYes
In-depth guide

EBITDA Margin: Complete Guide to Operating Cash Flow Quality

EBITDA margin is the most widely referenced profitability metric in corporate finance, M&A and credit analysis, serving as the universal yardstick against which every business is measured by lenders, private equity investors, strategic acquirers and equity analysts who need a standardised, accounting-policy-neutral view of operating cash generation quality. It measures the proportion of revenue that becomes operating cash generation before financing costs, tax and capital expenditure, making it the universal yardstick for comparing business quality across companies of different sizes, structures and jurisdictions.

What is EBITDA margin and what does it reveal?

EBITDA Margin equals EBITDA divided by Revenue, expressed as a percentage. It answers the fundamental question: of every dollar of revenue generated, how many cents become operating cash flow before interest payments, taxes and capital expenditure? A margin of 20% means 20 cents of every revenue dollar becomes EBITDA, and 80 cents is consumed by direct costs and operating overhead.

EBITDA margin is particularly valuable for multi-company comparisons because it removes the distortions of different capital structures (interest expense varies with debt level), different tax jurisdictions and effective rates (tax expense varies with domicile and planning), and different accounting depreciation methods (D&A varies with asset age, capitalisation policy and useful life assumptions). Removing all three sources of distortion gives analysts a clean view of how efficiently each business converts revenue into operating cash, independent of financial engineering or accounting choices. Two businesses with identical EBITDA margins but different net margins may be equally efficient operationally -- the difference in net margin reflects financing and tax strategy rather than business model quality.

How to calculate EBITDA margin

EBITDA Margin = EBITDA / Revenue x 100. EBITDA = Net Income + Interest + Tax + Depreciation + Amortisation. For a company with revenue of 5 million dollars and EBITDA of 900,000 dollars: EBITDA Margin = 900,000 / 5,000,000 = 18%. If the sector EV/EBITDA multiple is 10x, a 1 percentage point improvement in EBITDA margin adds 50,000 dollars to EBITDA at current revenue, creating 500,000 dollars of additional enterprise value.

The margin waterfall from gross to EBITDA reveals where revenue is consumed. Gross margin shows the efficiency of direct production or service delivery. The gap between gross margin and EBITDA margin equals operating overhead as a percentage of revenue (SG&A, R&D, other operating costs). Narrowing this gap -- through SG&A efficiency and operating leverage -- is the primary EBITDA margin improvement lever for businesses that have already optimised gross margin.

EBITDA margin benchmarks by industry

Software companies at scale typically achieve 25-45% EBITDA margins because their marginal cost of serving an additional customer approaches zero once the product is built. Healthcare and pharmaceutical companies average 15-25%. Industrial manufacturers typically run 10-18% depending on product complexity and automation level. Retail operates at 5-10% given its COGS intensity. Distribution and logistics averages 3-8%.

The appropriate target EBITDA margin depends on business model, market position and growth stage. An early-stage SaaS company may have negative EBITDA margin while investing heavily in customer acquisition, but should have a clear pathway to 20-30% margins at scale. A mature manufacturing business with 10% EBITDA margin in a sector that averages 15% has a clear improvement opportunity worth quantifying and pursuing.

How PE firms use EBITDA margin in investment analysis

Private equity firms use EBITDA margin as the primary diagnostic in operational due diligence. The gap between a target company's EBITDA margin and the best-in-class competitor's margin represents the performance improvement opportunity -- the operational value creation potential of the investment. A business acquired at 10x EBITDA with a 12% margin that can be improved to 18% over 3 years sees its EBITDA grow by 50%, driving enterprise value growth of the same percentage at an unchanged multiple.

EBITDA margin improvement is often the largest driver of returns in PE investments, alongside revenue growth and multiple expansion. The 100-day plan of a PE-owned business typically includes specific EBITDA margin improvement initiatives with assigned owners, targets and timelines. Understanding which EBITDA margin levers are controllable (pricing, procurement, SG&A efficiency) versus structural (competitive dynamics, raw material costs) is the key analytical distinction in any operational improvement thesis.

How to improve EBITDA margin

Pricing improvement is the highest-leverage EBITDA margin lever because it flows 100% to EBITDA with no associated cost increase. A 2% price increase on 5 million dollars of revenue adds 100,000 dollars directly to EBITDA without any cost change. For businesses with pricing power, this is the fastest and most impactful margin improvement available.

Direct cost reduction through procurement savings, design-to-cost engineering, scrap reduction and supplier renegotiation improves gross margin, which flows through to EBITDA. SG&A efficiency through automation, headcount management and discretionary spend review improves the operating overhead component. Revenue growth through operating leverage -- where fixed costs are spread over higher revenue -- improves EBITDA margin without any specific cost reduction, as long as incremental revenue has a positive contribution margin.

Common mistakes when analysing EBITDA margin

The most common mistake is using reported EBITDA margin without adjusting for significant one-time items. A large restructuring charge, an asset impairment or a major legal settlement can depress reported EBITDA margin significantly below the run-rate level. Using Adjusted EBITDA -- which removes these non-recurring items -- gives a more representative picture of the underlying margin.

A second mistake is treating EBITDA margin as equivalent to cash flow margin. EBITDA ignores capital expenditure, working capital changes and cash taxes. For capital-intensive businesses, EBITDA margin can be 15% while free cash flow margin is only 5% or even negative. Always examine the EBITDA-to-FCF conversion rate alongside EBITDA margin to assess the quality and sustainability of the reported margin.

Worked example: EBITDA margin analysis and EV impact

A healthcare services company has revenue of 20 million dollars and EBITDA of 3.2 million dollars. EBITDA Margin = 3.2 / 20 = 16.0%. The sector average EBITDA margin is 20% and the EV/EBITDA multiple is 12x. At current margin, implied EV = 12 x 3.2 = 38.4 million dollars. The 4 percentage point gap to sector average represents 4% x 20 million = 800,000 dollars of additional EBITDA opportunity. At 12x, this opportunity is worth 9.6 million dollars in enterprise value.

Management implements a three-year plan: pricing improvement adds 1pp (400,000 dollars EBITDA), procurement renegotiation adds 1.5pp (600,000), SG&A automation adds 0.5pp (200,000), leaving 1pp from operating leverage as revenue grows. Total target EBITDA improvement = 1.2 million dollars, bringing EBITDA to 4.4 million (22% margin). Implied EV at 12x = 52.8 million dollars -- an enterprise value increase of 14.4 million from margin improvement alone, without any multiple expansion or revenue growth assumption.

How to track EBITDA margin over time

Track this metric quarterly using identical methodology. Chart results over a rolling 12-24 months to identify trends and inflection points early. A consistent improvement trajectory demonstrates durable progress rather than one-off gains from external factors or accounting timing differences.

Compare three or more consecutive periods before drawing conclusions. Seasonality, one-time items and accounting changes can distort any single period reading. Three periods trending in the same direction constitute a genuine signal that warrants investigation and a specific improvement plan with measurable milestones.

Frequently asked questions

EBITDA Margin = EBITDA / Revenue x 100. It measures what percentage of revenue becomes EBITDA -- the operating cash flow proxy. A higher margin means more of each revenue dollar is converted to operating cash before interest, tax and capex.
Software: 25-45%. Healthcare: 15-25%. Manufacturing: 10-18%. Retail: 5-10%. Distribution: 3-8%. Always compare within your specific sector. Margins above 20% are considered strong in most non-financial industries.
Net profit margin includes interest, tax, D&A and one-time items. EBITDA margin excludes all four. EBITDA margin is therefore higher than net margin for all companies except those with negative interest, negative tax (tax credits) and no D&A. The gap reveals the combined cost of financing, tax and asset consumption.
EBITDA margin standardises cash generation across companies with different capital structures and accounting policies. For lenders, it determines how much of revenue is available to service debt. For PE firms, it drives enterprise value through EV/EBITDA multiples -- a 1 percentage point margin improvement translates directly into enterprise value at the deal multiple.
Pricing power improvement, direct cost reduction, product mix shift to higher-margin offerings, SG&A efficiency programmes and revenue growth (operating leverage) all improve EBITDA margin. Each lever should be sized by its magnitude within the P&L and feasibility of improvement.
Adjusted EBITDA Margin = Adjusted EBITDA / Revenue. Adjusted EBITDA removes one-time items (restructuring, share-based comp) to show the normalised run-rate margin. M&A valuations and loan covenants typically reference adjusted rather than reported EBITDA margin.
Not exactly. Operating margin (EBIT margin) includes D&A. EBITDA margin adds D&A back, making it higher than operating margin for any business with tangible or intangible assets. The gap equals D&A / Revenue.
Yes. The LazyTools EBITDA Margin Calculator is completely free, requires no signup and runs in your browser. No data is sent to any server.