Classic tool
Profit Margin Calculator
Calculate gross profit, profit margin, markup and selling price from your cost and pricing target.
Use this profit margin calculator to review pricing before you sell a product, send a quote, update a menu or adjust a service package. It helps you see how much money stays in each sale and how that result looks as margin and markup.
You can work in three ways: enter cost and current selling price, set a target margin or set a target markup. That makes the tool useful both for reviewing live prices and for building a new pricing table from scratch.
The result shows gross profit, profit margin, markup and the selling price used in the calculation. For deeper decisions, remember that taxes, shipping, platform fees and overhead may require an extra adjustment.
Use clear inputs to get a more useful result.
How to use Profit Margin Calculator
Open the tool, fill in the fields with the data you already have and generate the result step by step. If you want to compare scenarios, change one field at a time so it is easier to understand the impact of each value.
When Profit Margin Calculator is useful
The goal here is simple: Calculate gross profit, profit margin, markup and selling price from your cost and pricing target. It works well for quick checks, planning, study and review before you move to a final decision or document.
What to review before using the result
Check units, labels, numbers, timing and any context that can change the meaning of the output. If the result will be used in a quote, technical task, published page or report, finish with a manual review.
Frequently asked questions
What should I prepare before using the tool?
Keep the key values, labels and units ready before filling in the fields. Cleaner inputs make the final result easier to review and compare.
Can I test different scenarios on the same page?
Yes. The safest approach is to change one field at a time, compare the outputs and note which value actually changes the final answer.
Is the result ready to use without checking it?
It is better to treat it as support. Review the output once more before using it in a quote, document, spreadsheet, technical task or published page.