Understanding the Three Profit Margins
Profit margin analysis is foundational to evaluating business health. There are three key margin levels, each giving progressively more complete picture of profitability. The profit margin calculator computes all three from your income statement data, allowing comprehensive financial analysis in seconds.
Gross Profit Margin
Gross margin = (Revenue − COGS) ÷ Revenue × 100. It measures how efficiently a company produces its goods or services, before accounting for overhead. High gross margins give a company flexibility to invest in growth, absorb overhead, and remain profitable even during revenue downturns. A 60% gross margin means $0.60 of every sales dollar remains after covering direct production costs.
Operating Profit Margin
Operating margin = (Gross Profit − Operating Expenses) ÷ Revenue × 100. Operating expenses include rent, salaries, marketing, R&D, depreciation, and other overhead not tied to specific products. This is EBIT (Earnings Before Interest and Taxes) as a percentage of revenue — a key metric for operational efficiency.
Net Profit Margin
Net margin = Net Income ÷ Revenue × 100. This is the "bottom line" — what percentage of revenue survives all costs, interest, and taxes to become true profit. Net margin is the most comprehensive measure of overall profitability and the one most watched by investors and lenders.
Industry Benchmarks
Gross margins by sector: Software/SaaS (65–85%), Financial services (50–70%), Healthcare (35–50%), Retail (20–40%), Manufacturing (25–35%), Restaurant (60–70% on food cost, 3–9% net). Compare to industry peers rather than absolute standards — a 5% net margin is excellent in retail but concerning in software.