Free Finance Tool · Global · Margin · Markup Converter · 8 Currencies
Margin Calculator
Calculate gross margin %, markup and profit per unit. Margin-to-markup converter, target price solver and price sensitivity table. 8 currencies. Free.
| Sell price | Margin% | Markup% | Profit/unit |
|---|
How to Use the Margin Calculator
Enter selling price and cost to calculate gross margin percentage, markup and profit per unit. Furthermore, the conversion fields instantly translate any markup to its equivalent margin and vice versa. Additionally, the target margin field solves for the exact price needed to achieve any desired margin.
- Enter selling price and costSelling price is what the customer pays. Furthermore, cost is the direct cost to produce or acquire the product. Additionally, the calculator immediately shows margin, markup and profit per unit.
- Use the markup-to-margin converterEnter any markup percentage to see the equivalent margin. Furthermore, markup and margin measure the same profit but from different bases. Additionally, a 66.67% markup equals 40% margin — a common source of pricing confusion.
- Use the margin-to-markup converterEnter any margin percentage to see the equivalent markup. Furthermore, Margin → Markup = Margin ÷ (1 − Margin). Additionally, this confirms the relationship for any target margin.
- Set target margin to find required pricePrice = Cost ÷ (1 − target margin%). Furthermore, this is the only correct pricing formula for a target margin. Additionally, adding margin% directly to cost gives markup not margin — a very costly mistake.
- Read the price sensitivity tableThe table shows margin and markup at prices from 90% to 200% of cost. Furthermore, the break-even price (0% margin) confirms the cost floor. Additionally, the current price is highlighted for easy reference.
Margin and Markup Formulas
Margin and markup are both measures of profit but use different denominators. Furthermore, confusing the two is one of the most common and costly pricing errors in business. Additionally, always confirm which formula is being used before setting prices.
Margin vs Markup Conversion Table
| Margin% | Equivalent markup% |
|---|---|
| 10% | 11.11% |
| 20% | 25.00% |
| 25% | 33.33% |
| 30% | 42.86% |
| 33.33% | 50.00% |
| 40% | 66.67% |
| 50% | 100.00% |
| 60% | 150.00% |
The Margin vs Markup Trap — Real World Impact
The margin-markup confusion costs businesses significant profit each year. Furthermore, a business targeting 40% margin but accidentally applying 40% markup only achieves a 28.6% margin. Additionally, on $1M of annual revenue this mistake reduces gross profit by $113,000 per year.
Retail and distribution businesses are particularly vulnerable. Furthermore, many POS and ERP systems allow configuration of either margin or markup as the pricing basis. Additionally, always verify which mode is active before applying percentage-based pricing rules to a large product catalogue.
Pricing Strategy and Target Margin
Value-based pricing sets price by perceived customer value, then works backward to assess margin. Furthermore, cost-plus pricing starts with cost and adds a fixed percentage — which should be based on target margin, not markup. Additionally, the target margin approach ensures every product contributes consistently to covering fixed overhead.
Gross Margin vs Net Margin
The margin this calculator shows is gross margin — the percentage of selling price remaining after direct costs. Furthermore, net margin deducts all overhead, interest and tax from revenue. Additionally, gross margin is the building block — a business must achieve sufficient gross margin to cover overhead and still generate net profit.
Margin in Different Industries
Average gross margin ranges from under 20% in commodity retail to over 80% in software. Furthermore, high-margin businesses typically have lower physical costs and higher brand or IP value. Additionally, businesses with gross margin below 30% operate with little room for overhead, making cost management critical.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Finance Tools
Markup Calculator
Calculate markup percentage from cost and price. Furthermore, markup uses cost as the base instead of price.
→Markdown Calculator
Price reduction percentage from original price. Additionally, markdown is the opposite direction of markup.
→Sales Margin Calculator
Per-unit margin with volume scaling. Furthermore, multiply margin per unit by volume for total gross profit.
→Gross Margin Calculator
Gross margin from total revenue and COGS. Additionally, aggregate margin across all products.
→Margin After Discount
Margin remaining after a discount is applied. Furthermore, discounts reduce margin faster than many expect.
→Break-Even Calculator
Units needed to cover fixed costs at your margin. Additionally, margin is the key input to break-even analysis.
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