Business Profit Calculator โ€” free UK online tool
profit calculatorgross profit marginnet profitbusiness finance UKprofit margin
๐Ÿ“Š Gross & Net Profit Margins

Business Profit Calculator

Calculate your business's gross profit, net profit and profit margin from revenue, cost of goods sold and operating expenses. Understand whether your business model is generating sustainable profit โ€” and by how much.

โœ… Free to use
โšก Instant results
๐Ÿ”’ No data stored
๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง UK-specific
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โš™๏ธ Business Profit Calculator

Enter your figures above and click Calculate

๐Ÿ“– How This Tool Works

Enter total revenue (all sales income), cost of goods sold (COGS โ€” the direct cost of producing your product or service), and operating expenses (rent, salaries, marketing, software and other indirect costs).

Key Definitions

Gross Profit = Revenue โˆ’ Cost of Goods Sold

Net Profit = Gross Profit โˆ’ Operating Expenses

Gross Margin = (Gross Profit รท Revenue) ร— 100%

Net Margin = (Net Profit รท Revenue) ร— 100%

A healthy gross margin for product businesses is typically 40โ€“60%. Service businesses often operate at 60โ€“80% gross margin. Net margins vary widely by sector and business model.

๐Ÿ’ก Example Calculation

Revenue ยฃ50,000, COGS ยฃ20,000, expenses ยฃ12,000 โ†’ gross profit ยฃ30,000 (60% gross margin), net profit ยฃ18,000 (36% net margin), total costs ยฃ32,000.

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Everything You Need to Know About Business Profit Calculator

What is the Business Profit Calculator?

Profit and revenue are not the same thing โ€” a business can have high revenue and low or negative profit. The business profit calculator separates these three layers: revenue (the total money coming in), gross profit (revenue minus the direct cost of delivering that revenue), and net profit (what remains after all costs are paid). Understanding all three, and the margin percentages, is essential for sound business decision-making.

Gross margin is particularly important when evaluating pricing or product mix. If you sell three products with different gross margins, the business should direct resources toward the highest-margin products โ€” but only gross margin analysis makes this visible. Net margin reflects the whole business, including fixed overheads that do not change with volume.

How to Get the Best Result

Use realistic figures rather than aspirational ones. COGS should include every directly attributable cost: raw materials, direct labour, packaging, shipping to customer, and any third-party services that are consumed per unit sold. Operating expenses should include everything else that the business incurs regularly, even if not tied to a specific sale.

Run two scenarios: one with current figures, one with a 10% increase in revenue but the same fixed expenses. The second scenario reveals how much of the additional revenue drops to net profit โ€” in businesses with high fixed costs and low variable costs, the incremental net margin can be very high, which is the rationale for growth-focused strategies.

When to Seek Professional Advice

If your business is operating at a negative net margin (a loss), it is important to understand why before taking action. If the gross margin is positive but net margin is negative, you may be able to become profitable by cutting fixed expenses or increasing revenue. If gross margin is negative, the fundamental product economics need to change โ€” raising prices, reducing production costs, or changing the product mix.

For accounting, tax planning and business structuring advice, a qualified accountant registered with ICAEW, ACCA or CIMA is the appropriate professional. Many accountants offer a free initial consultation.

โš ๏ธ This calculator provides estimates for planning purposes only. Results should not be treated as financial, tax, legal or investment advice. Always verify important figures with a qualified professional, lender, accountant or official source such as HMRC or the Money and Pensions Service.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about this calculator and how to use it.

Gross profit is revenue minus the direct cost of producing your goods or services (COGS). Net profit is gross profit minus all other operating expenses โ€” rent, staff, marketing, utilities, software. Net profit is what remains for the owner after all business costs.
This varies significantly by industry. Retail businesses often operate on net margins of 2โ€“10%. Service businesses (consulting, design, software) may achieve 15โ€“35% net margins. Anything above 20% is generally considered strong. Compare your margin to published industry benchmarks for your sector.
Include all costs not directly tied to producing each unit of product or service: rent, utilities, staff salaries (other than direct production staff), marketing, accountancy, software, insurance, depreciation on assets, and any other recurring overhead.
Indirectly โ€” your break-even is when gross profit equals operating expenses. Divide your total operating expenses by your gross margin percentage to find the revenue needed to break even.
Gross margin tells you about the fundamental economics of your product or service โ€” whether you can produce and sell it profitably at all. Net margin can be improved by cutting expenses, but if gross margin is negative, the business is structurally unprofitable at any scale.
No โ€” enter your revenue and costs excluding VAT for an accurate profit calculation. VAT collected from customers is paid to HMRC and is not business income; similarly, VAT paid on expenses can be reclaimed if you are VAT-registered.
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