Your Results
Total COGS per Unit
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The sum of all direct costs associated with producing one unit of your product.
Gross Profit per Unit
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The profit earned from selling one unit after deducting its direct production costs.
Gross Margin Percentage
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The percentage of revenue that exceeds the cost of goods sold, indicating product profitability.
How This Calculator Works
This calculator determines gross profit by subtracting the total cost of goods sold (COGS) per unit from the selling price per unit. The gross margin percentage is then calculated by dividing this gross profit by the selling price, providing a clear profitability ratio.
When to Use This Tool
A food brand is developing a new snack bar and needs to set a competitive yet profitable wholesale price.
The tool reveals the minimum selling price required to achieve a target gross margin, ensuring the new product contributes positively to overall profit.
An existing beverage SKU is underperforming, and the brand suspects its profitability is too low.
By inputting current costs and selling price, the brand identifies if high COGS or low pricing is the primary driver of poor gross margin, guiding cost reduction or price adjustment strategies.
A CPG brand is evaluating two different suppliers for a key ingredient, each with varying costs.
The calculator helps compare how each supplier's cost impacts the final gross margin, allowing for a data-driven decision on supplier selection.
Common Questions
What costs should I include in the 'Cost of Goods Sold' for my food product?
COGS typically includes raw materials, packaging, direct labor involved in production, and manufacturing overhead directly tied to producing your product. It does not include marketing, sales, or administrative expenses.
Why is gross margin so important for food brands?
Gross margin is crucial because it shows the fundamental profitability of each product before considering operating expenses. A healthy gross margin ensures you have enough revenue left to cover overheads and generate net profit.
How often should I calculate my gross margin?
You should calculate gross margin whenever ingredient costs change, packaging costs fluctuate, or you are considering a price adjustment. Regular review, at least quarterly, is also recommended to monitor product health.
Does this calculator account for marketing or distribution costs?
No, this calculator focuses solely on gross margin, which only considers direct production costs. Marketing, sales, and distribution expenses are operating costs that are factored into net profit, not gross profit.
Understand Your Product Profitability Now
Guidance provides essential tools and expert insights to help CPG food brands optimize their operations and financial performance.
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