Logo

UK Profit Margin Calculator

Professional margin analysis for UK SMEs and sole traders. Calculate profitability and pricing in seconds.

analytics Business Figures

£
£

Direct costs: materials, labor, shipping.

£

Indirect costs: rent, utilities, marketing, salaries.

Pricing Assistant

%

Calculates the price needed to achieve this margin based on your COGS.

Gross Profit 0%
£0
Net Profit 0%
£0

Revenue Allocation

Recommended Sales Price

To achieve your target margin of 0%, you should charge:

Formula: COGS / (1 - Margin%)

Profitability Breakdown

Category Amount (£) % of Revenue
Total Revenue £0 100%
Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) -£0 0%
Gross Profit £0 0%
Operating Expenses -£0 0%
Net Profit (EBITDA) £0 0%

What is Profit Margin?

Profit margin is one of the most critical KPIs for any UK business, from freelancers to large corporations. It measures how much of every £1 in sales your company actually keeps after paying costs.

Gross Profit vs. Net Profit

Understanding the difference is key to managing your business effectively:

  • Gross Profit Margin: Focuses purely on production efficiency. It looks at how much money is left after direct costs like materials and labour (COGS).
  • Net Profit Margin: The"bottom line." This subtracts everything—rent, marketing, salaries, and insurance (OpEx). It tells you how truly profitable the whole business is.

How to improve your margin

If your margins are low, you have two primary levers:

  1. Increase Price: Use our Pricing Assistant above to find your target price.
  2. Reduce Costs: Negotiate with suppliers or optimize your workflow to lower COGS.

Example Calculation

"A UK ecommerce shop sells a widget for £50. The widget costs £20 to buy and ship (COGS). Monthly rent and ads average £10 per widget (OpEx)."

Revenue: £50

Gross Profit: £50 - £20 = £30 (60% Margin)

Net Profit: £30 - £10 = £20 (40% Margin)

FAQ

What is the difference between gross and net profit margin? expand_more
Gross margin only looks at direct costs of the product. Net margin looks at the entire cost of running the business, including overheads like rent and utilities.
How do I calculate the price to achieve a target margin? expand_more
Divid your Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) by (1 minus your target margin decimal). For example, for a 40% margin, divide COGS by 0.6.
What expenses should I include in my profit calculation? expand_more
Include all recurring costs: business insurance, website hosting, marketing spend, accountancy fees, and any staff salaries. Don't forget to account for your own time!

How this calculator works

This profit margin calculator uses revenue, cost of goods sold and operating expenses to estimate gross profit, net profit and margin percentages. It also uses a target margin input to suggest a selling price required to hit that margin.

Assumptions used

  • The calculator assumes your revenue and cost inputs relate to the same unit, batch or comparable time period.
  • Gross margin and net margin are simplified management metrics and do not replace statutory accounts.
  • Tax, financing costs, depreciation and cash flow timing may need separate analysis depending on your business model.
  • The suggested target price is a planning aid only and should be tested against market demand and competition.

Frequently asked questions

Why are gross and net margin different?

Gross margin only considers direct product costs, while net margin also includes wider operating expenses such as rent, software, marketing and staff costs.

Can a healthy gross margin still produce a weak business?

Yes. If overheads are high or pricing is inconsistent, a business can show a good gross margin but still struggle on net profitability and cash flow.

Should I price only from target margin?

No. Margin targets are useful, but pricing should also account for demand, positioning, competitors and VAT or delivery implications where relevant.

Can this replace management accounts?

No. It is a fast planning tool for unit economics or rough business scenarios, not a replacement for bookkeeping, management accounts or accountant review.