Economic Profit Calculator -- EVA & Value Creation | LazyTools
📊 Finance Tool

Economic Profit Calculator

Calculate economic profit (EVA) from NOPAT and invested capital. Displays the ROIC minus WACC spread that determines whether the business creates or destroys value, and shows the exact capital charge that converts accounting profit into economic profit.

Free & instantEVA calculationROIC vs WACCValue creation flag
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Net Operating Profit After Tax = EBIT x (1 - Tax Rate).
Total debt + equity - non-operating assets.
Weighted average cost of capital -- your required return hurdle.
📈 Enter NOPAT, invested capital and WACC, then click Calculate
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Also try the Accounting Profit Calculator
Accounting profit is the starting point for economic profit. Calculate it from revenue and all explicit cost lines before applying the capital charge.
Open Accounting Profit 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.

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ROIC vs WACC spread
Computes ROIC (NOPAT / Invested Capital) and compares it directly to WACC. The spread -- positive or negative -- is the most direct measure of value creation or destruction.
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Value creation flag
Green for positive economic profit (value creation), red for destruction. Includes the dollar amount of value created or destroyed to make the result immediately actionable.
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Capital charge breakdown
Shows the full capital charge (Invested Capital x WACC) separately from NOPAT, making the opportunity cost of capital visible as a concrete dollar figure.
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Six-industry benchmark
Compare your result against sector averages with no manual lookup required.
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Formula working
Full substituted formula shown with every result for verification and copying.
Free, no signup
Completely free. Runs in your browser. No data ever sent to any server.
How to use

How to use this calculator

1
Enter figures
Type NOPAT, invested capital and WACC into the labelled fields, using the same reporting period for all inputs.
2
Verify sources
Cross-check each figure against the correct financial statement.
3
Click Calculate
Instant result with formula, supporting metrics and plain-English interpretation.
4
Read the interpretation
The note explains what the result means and flags any concerns.
5
Benchmark and track
Compare to your sector average, then re-enter each period to track trends.
Feature comparison

How we compare to alternatives

FeatureLazyToolsOmniCalcInvestopediaWall St Mojo
ROIC vs WACC spread + value flagYesNoNoNo
Industry benchmarkYesNoNoNo
Step-by-step formulaYesPartialYesPartial
Interpretation guideYesPartialYesNo
Multi-modeYesPartialNoNo
Free, no signupYesYesYesYes
In-depth guide

Economic Profit: Complete Guide to Value Creation Analysis

Economic profit is the most rigorous measure of whether a business genuinely creates value for its owners, cutting through the limitations of accounting profit to reveal whether capital deployed in the business earns above or below the minimum return that investors could achieve elsewhere at an equivalent level of risk -- the definitive test of genuine shareholder value creation. Unlike accounting profit, which ignores the cost of equity capital, economic profit deducts the full opportunity cost of all capital employed -- revealing whether the business earns above the minimum return required by investors or quietly destroys wealth while reporting positive earnings.

What is economic profit and why does it matter?

Economic profit -- also called Economic Value Added (EVA) -- equals NOPAT minus the capital charge (Invested Capital multiplied by WACC). A positive economic profit means every dollar of capital deployed earns more than investors could earn elsewhere at similar risk. A negative economic profit means capital is being misallocated: the business earns less than its cost of capital, destroying shareholder wealth even when accounting profits are positive.

The distinction between accounting and economic profit is fundamental. A retailer earning 500,000 dollars of net income on 10 million dollars of invested capital appears profitable on its income statement. But if its WACC is 8%, the capital charge is 800,000 dollars, giving economic profit of 500,000 minus 800,000 equals negative 300,000 dollars. The business destroys 300,000 dollars of shareholder value each year despite reporting positive accounting profit -- a reality invisible to anyone looking only at the income statement.

How to calculate economic profit

Economic Profit = NOPAT minus (Invested Capital x WACC). NOPAT equals EBIT multiplied by (1 minus the effective tax rate). Invested Capital equals total debt plus total equity minus non-operating assets such as excess cash and financial investments. WACC equals the blended required return on all capital sources, weighted by proportion.

Equivalently, Economic Profit = (ROIC minus WACC) x Invested Capital, where ROIC = NOPAT / Invested Capital. This form reveals the unit economics of value creation: if ROIC is 14% and WACC is 10%, the spread is 4% and economic profit equals 4% multiplied by invested capital. Every additional dollar of invested capital deployed at a 4% spread creates 0.04 dollars of economic profit -- positive if ROIC exceeds WACC, negative if it falls short.

What determines ROIC and WACC?

ROIC is determined by the business model's ability to generate operating profit from each dollar of capital deployed. High ROIC businesses -- branded consumer goods, software, pharmaceuticals -- generate exceptional returns because they earn high margins without requiring proportionally high capital investment. Capital-intensive businesses -- utilities, mining, telecoms -- earn lower ROIC because every additional dollar of revenue requires significant additional capital.

WACC reflects the blended cost of debt and equity financing. The cost of debt is the after-tax interest rate on borrowings. The cost of equity is estimated using CAPM (risk-free rate plus equity risk premium multiplied by beta) or other models. Businesses with more volatile earnings face higher equity costs and therefore higher WACC hurdle rates for economic profit.

How economic profit drives long-run shareholder value

Sustained positive economic profit is the primary driver of long-run shareholder value. When a business earns above its WACC consistently, it creates a present value of future economic profits that exceeds the book value of invested capital -- this premium is what creates market value above book value, measured by metrics such as Price-to-Book and Tobin's Q.

The relationship between economic profit and equity returns is well-established in academic finance. Companies in the top ROIC-minus-WACC spread quintile have historically generated significantly higher long-run total shareholder returns than those in lower quintiles. This is why management teams in high-quality businesses focus intensely on ROIC improvement rather than simply maximising accounting profit growth.

How to use economic profit in capital allocation

Economic profit analysis transforms capital allocation from a gut-feeling exercise into a rigorous framework. Any proposed investment should be evaluated on its expected ROIC relative to WACC. If ROIC on a new project is projected at 12% and WACC is 10%, the project creates economic profit and should proceed. If ROIC is only 8%, the project destroys economic value and should be rejected or restructured.

The economic profit framework also guides portfolio decisions for multi-business companies. Divisions that consistently earn above WACC deserve continued investment; those that consistently destroy economic profit should be restructured, divested or wound down -- even if they report accounting profits. This is precisely why economic profit analysis is central to the strategic portfolio reviews of well-managed conglomerates and PE-owned businesses.

Common mistakes when calculating economic profit

The most common error is using accounting profit rather than NOPAT as the starting point. Accounting profit includes the effects of capital structure (interest expense after tax is already deducted) which would double-count the debt component when calculating the capital charge. NOPAT adds back the after-tax interest cost to produce a capital-structure-neutral starting figure.

A second mistake is underestimating WACC. Many businesses use their cost of debt as a proxy for WACC, ignoring the higher cost of equity. Since equity holders bear more risk than debtholders, the cost of equity is always higher than the cost of debt. Using a WACC that is too low produces an economic profit figure that overstates actual value creation and can mislead management teams into over-investing in low-return capital.

Worked example: economic profit and value creation analysis

A manufacturer has EBIT of 1.2 million dollars and an effective tax rate of 25%. NOPAT = 1.2 x 0.75 = 900,000 dollars. Invested capital is 8 million dollars. WACC is 10%. Capital Charge = 8,000,000 x 0.10 = 800,000 dollars. Economic Profit = 900,000 minus 800,000 = 100,000 dollars. ROIC = 900,000 / 8,000,000 = 11.25%. ROIC minus WACC spread = 1.25%.

The positive economic profit of 100,000 dollars confirms the business creates value, but the 1.25% spread is narrow. If ROIC were to fall below 10% WACC due to margin compression or capital growth, the business would begin destroying value. Management should target a spread of at least 3-5% as a buffer against economic downturns, equivalent to ROIC of 13-15% at 10% WACC -- achieved through margin improvement or reduction of non-productive invested capital.

How to track economic profit over time

Track this metric every quarter using identical methodology. Chart results over a rolling 12-to-24-month window to identify improvement trajectories and catch inflection points before they become entrenched. A consistently improving trend signals durable operational progress rather than a one-off benefit from external factors or timing differences.

Require at least three consecutive periods of movement in the same direction before drawing management conclusions. A single abnormal reading may reflect seasonality, a one-time transaction, or an accounting policy change rather than a genuine structural shift. Three consecutive periods trending together constitute a real signal warranting a root-cause investigation and a targeted response plan with measurable milestones.

Frequently asked questions

Economic profit equals accounting profit minus the opportunity cost of all resources employed, including equity capital. Economic Profit = Net Operating Profit After Tax (NOPAT) - (Invested Capital x WACC). A positive economic profit means the business earns above its cost of capital and creates genuine shareholder value.
Economic Profit = NOPAT - Capital Charge = NOPAT - (Invested Capital x WACC). Equivalently: Economic Profit = (ROIC - WACC) x Invested Capital. Both give the same result. This is also called Economic Value Added (EVA), a framework trademarked by Stern Stewart.
Accounting profit deducts explicit costs (wages, rent, interest) but ignores the opportunity cost of equity capital. Economic profit deducts all opportunity costs including the required return on equity. A business can be accounting-profitable but economically unprofitable if its returns don't exceed the cost of capital.
WACC (Weighted Average Cost of Capital) is the blended required return on all capital sources weighted by their proportion of total capital. WACC = (Equity / Total Capital) x Cost of Equity + (Debt / Total Capital) x Cost of Debt x (1 - Tax Rate). It is the hurdle rate for economic profit.
Net Operating Profit After Tax = EBIT x (1 - Tax Rate). It measures operating profit available to all capital providers after tax, eliminating the effect of capital structure. NOPAT is the numerator in ROIC and the starting point for economic profit.
Positive economic profit means the business earns above its cost of capital and creates value for shareholders. All capital deployed earns more than the minimum required return. This is the definition of genuine value creation and should be the primary financial objective of management.
Negative economic profit means the business destroys value -- returns are below the cost of capital even if accounting profit is positive. A company can report a profit on its income statement while simultaneously destroying shareholder wealth if returns don't cover the full opportunity cost of capital.
Yes. The LazyTools Economic Profit Calculator is completely free, requires no signup and runs in your browser with no data sent to any server.