Break-Even Calculator - Calculate Your Business Break-Even Point

Break-Even Calculator

Calculate your business break-even point based on fixed costs, variable costs, and selling price

USD
USD/unit
USD/unit
USD
Sales Volume Projection (Units)
Projected Monthly Sales
500 units
10 500 1000 1500 2000
Currency
USD ($)
EUR (€)
GBP (£)
INR (₹)
CAD (C$)
Industry Break-Even Comparison
Calculation History

No calculation history yet. Try calculating your break-even point!

Business Examples
Break-Even Point
250 units
You need to sell 250 units to break even. At $35 per unit, that's $8,750 in revenue.
Break-even is where total revenue equals total costs. After this point, you start making profit.
$8,750
Break-Even Revenue
$20
Contribution Margin
57.1%
Margin Ratio
750
Units for Target Profit
Break-Even Analysis Chart
Profit Zone
Loss Zone
Break-Even Point
Break-Even Analysis Explained
Fixed Costs
Costs that don't change with production volume (rent, salaries, insurance).
Remain constant
Variable Costs
Costs that change with each unit produced (materials, labor, shipping).
Vary with production
Selling Price
Price at which you sell each unit to customers.
Revenue per unit
Break-Even Point
Number of units you need to sell to cover all costs.
Fixed Costs ÷ (Price - Variable Cost)
Contribution Margin
Amount each unit contributes to covering fixed costs and profit.
Price - Variable Cost
Target Profit
Desired profit level. Add to fixed costs to calculate units needed.
(Fixed Costs + Profit) ÷ Margin
Common Business Break-Even Examples
Coffee Shop
150 cups/day
$5/cup, $2,000 fixed costs
E-commerce Store
400 units/month
$50/unit, $8,000 fixed costs
Consulting Service
15 clients/month
$1,000/client, $5,000 fixed
SaaS Business
100 subscribers
$29/month, $2,500 fixed
Restaurant
60 meals/day
$25/meal, $10,000 fixed
Online Course
50 students
$199/course, $5,000 fixed

Creator & Maintainer

Image of Faiq Ur Rahman, CEO & Founder Toolraxy

Faiq Ur Rahman

Founder & CEO, Toolraxy

Faiq Ur Rahman is a web designer, digital product developer, and founder of Toolraxy, a growing platform of web-based calculators and utility tools. He specializes in building structured, user-friendly tools focused on health, finance, productivity, and everyday problem-solving.

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About

The Break-Even Calculator helps business owners and entrepreneurs determine the exact number of units they need to sell to cover all costs. Break-even analysis is a fundamental financial metric that shows when your total revenue equals your total expenses—the point where your business moves from loss to profit.

This calculator factors in fixed costs (rent, salaries, insurance), variable costs per unit (materials, labor, shipping), and your selling price. It also accounts for taxes, operational expenses, and marketing costs to give you a realistic picture of your business financials.

Whether you’re launching a startup, pricing a new product, or evaluating an existing business model, understanding your break-even point helps you set sales targets, make pricing decisions, and assess business viability.

How to Use (Step-by-Step)

  1. Enter your fixed costs – Input your monthly or periodic fixed expenses like rent, salaries, and insurance.

  2. Enter variable cost per unit – Add the cost to produce or acquire each unit (materials, labor, shipping).

  3. Enter selling price per unit – Input the price you charge customers for each unit.

  4. Set your target profit – Enter the profit amount you want to achieve (optional).

  5. Adjust the sales volume slider – See how different sales volumes affect your profitability.

  6. Toggle additional costs – Check or uncheck taxes, operational expenses, and marketing costs to see their impact.

  7. Select your currency – Choose from USD, EUR, GBP, INR, or CAD for localized results.

  8. Click Calculate – View your break-even point, contribution margin, and target profit units instantly.

How This Tool Works?

The Break-Even Calculator uses standard cost-volume-profit (CVP) analysis formulas to determine when your business becomes profitable.

Core Formula:

Break-Even Units = Fixed Costs ÷ (Selling Price – Variable Cost per Unit)

 

Where:

  • Fixed Costs = Expenses that don’t change with production volume (rent, salaries, insurance)

  • Selling Price = Price charged per unit to customers

  • Variable Cost per Unit = Costs that vary directly with each unit produced

  • Contribution Margin = Selling Price – Variable Cost per Unit

 

Additional Calculations:

Break-Even Revenue = Break-Even Units × Selling Price
Contribution Margin Ratio = (Contribution Margin ÷ Selling Price) × 100
Target Profit Units = (Fixed Costs + Target Profit) ÷ Contribution Margin

 

Adjustment Logic:

  • Tax (15%): Multiplies fixed costs by 1.15

  • Operational (20%): Multiplies fixed costs by 1.20

  • Marketing (10%): Multiplies fixed costs by 1.10

All adjustments compound (e.g., tax + marketing = fixed costs × 1.15 × 1.10). Results are rounded up using Math.ceil() since you cannot sell partial units.

The interactive chart plots revenue against total costs across different sales volumes, visually showing the break-even intersection point.

Example Calculation

Input Values:

  • Fixed Costs: $5,000

  • Variable Cost per Unit: $15

  • Selling Price per Unit: $35

  • Target Profit: $10,000

Step-by-Step Calculation:

  1. Calculate Contribution Margin:
    $35 – $15 = $20 per unit

  2. Calculate Break-Even Units:
    $5,000 ÷ $20 = 250 units

  3. Calculate Break-Even Revenue:
    250 units × $35 = $8,750

  4. Calculate Margin Ratio:
    ($20 ÷ $35) × 100 = 57.1%

  5. Calculate Units for Target Profit:
    ($5,000 + $10,000) ÷ $20 = 750 units

Final Output:

  • Break-Even Point: 250 units

  • Break-Even Revenue: $8,750

  • Contribution Margin: $20 per unit

  • Margin Ratio: 57.1%

  • Units for $10,000 Profit: 750 units

This means you need to sell 250 units at $35 each to cover all costs. Every unit sold beyond 250 generates $20 in profit.

What Is Break-Even Analysis?

Break-even analysis is a financial calculation that determines the point at which total revenue equals total costs. At this point, a business generates neither profit nor loss—it “breaks even.” The break-even point is typically expressed in units sold or revenue generated.

This analysis is part of cost-volume-profit (CVP) analysis, a management accounting tool that helps businesses understand the relationship between costs, sales volume, and profitability. The concept applies to any business that sells products or services, from small startups to large corporations.

 

Why Break-Even Analysis Matters

Understanding your break-even point is essential for several business decisions:

Pricing Strategy: Break-even analysis reveals the minimum price you must charge to cover costs. If your selling price falls below the break-even threshold, you’ll operate at a loss regardless of sales volume.

Sales Targeting: Knowing your break-even point gives your sales team a concrete goal. It answers the question: “How many units must we sell to stay in business?”

Cost Management: The analysis highlights the impact of fixed and variable costs on profitability. Small reductions in variable costs or fixed expenses can significantly lower the break-even point.

Investment Decisions: Investors and lenders often request break-even analysis to assess business viability and risk. A high break-even point suggests greater risk if sales fluctuate.

Product Launches: Before introducing new products, break-even analysis helps determine if the potential market size justifies the investment.

 

Key Components of Break-Even Analysis

Fixed Costs:
Fixed costs remain constant regardless of production volume. Common examples include:

  • Rent and lease payments

  • Salaries for permanent staff

  • Insurance premiums

  • Equipment depreciation

  • Software subscriptions

  • Loan payments

These costs must be paid even if you sell zero units, making them critical to the break-even calculation.

Variable Costs:
Variable costs change directly with production volume. Examples include:

  • Raw materials

  • Direct labor (hourly wages)

  • Packaging

  • Shipping and delivery

  • Sales commissions

  • Transaction fees

Variable costs per unit typically remain constant, but total variable costs increase as you sell more units.

Contribution Margin:
The contribution margin is selling price minus variable cost per unit. This amount “contributes” to covering fixed costs and generating profit. A higher contribution margin means fewer units needed to break even.

Selling Price:
The price customers pay per unit. Pricing decisions directly affect the break-even point—higher prices lower the break-even units but may reduce demand.

 

Real-World Applications

Manufacturing Businesses:
A furniture manufacturer calculates how many chairs they must sell to cover factory rent, equipment costs, and materials. This informs production planning and inventory management.

Retail Stores:
A clothing boutique determines daily sales needed to cover rent, staff wages, and inventory costs. This helps set sales targets for sales associates.

Restaurants and Cafes:
Break-even analysis reveals how many meals or cups of coffee must be sold daily to cover kitchen staff, ingredients, and overhead. This guides menu pricing and hours of operation.

Service Businesses:
Consultants, agencies, and freelancers calculate billable hours needed to cover office expenses, software costs, and desired income.

E-commerce Stores:
Online retailers factor in product costs, marketing spend, and platform fees to determine monthly sales targets.

SaaS Companies:
Subscription businesses calculate required subscriber counts to cover development costs, server expenses, and customer support.

 

Benefits of Regular Break-Even Analysis

Financial Clarity: Provides a clear target for sales and production teams.

Risk Assessment: Helps identify businesses with unsustainably high break-even points.

Scenario Planning: Enables “what-if” analysis by adjusting costs or prices to see impact.

Performance Tracking: Compare actual sales against break-even targets to measure progress.

Investment Justification: Supports funding requests with concrete financial projections.

Operational Efficiency: Highlights areas where cost reductions would have the greatest impact.

 

Limitations of Break-Even Analysis

Assumes Linear Relationships: Real-world costs may not remain perfectly fixed or variable across all production levels.

Single Product Focus: Most break-even models assume one product, though businesses often sell multiple items with different margins.

Static Analysis: Break-even points change as costs, prices, and market conditions shift.

Ignores Time Value: Doesn’t account for when costs are incurred versus when revenue is received.

Simplifies Demand: Assumes all units produced can be sold at the given price.

Excludes Qualitative Factors: Doesn’t consider brand value, customer loyalty, or competitive positioning.

 

Common Mistakes in Break-Even Analysis

Misclassifying Costs: Treating semi-variable costs (like utilities with base fees plus usage charges) as purely fixed or variable.

Forgetting All Costs: Overlooking expenses like insurance, software subscriptions, or professional fees.

Unrealistic Price Assumptions: Assuming you can sell unlimited units at current prices without considering market demand.

Ignoring Economies of Scale: Variable costs may decrease at higher volumes due to bulk discounts.

Fixed Cost Creep: Not updating fixed costs as the business grows or adds expenses.

Seasonal Variations: Using annual averages without accounting for seasonal sales patterns.

 

Industry Benchmark

Restaurant Industry

  • Typical Fixed Costs: $8,000–$15,000 per month

  • Variable Costs: 30–40% of revenue

  • Average Break-Even Time: 6–18 months

  • Key Considerations: Food costs, labor, rent, and seasonal fluctuations significantly impact break-even timelines. Location and concept (fast casual vs. fine dining) affect both fixed and variable cost structures.

 

E-commerce Business

  • Typical Fixed Costs: $3,000–$8,000 per month

  • Variable Costs: 50–70% of revenue

  • Average Break-Even Time: 3–12 months

  • Key Considerations: Platform fees, payment processing, shipping costs, and marketing expenses drive variable costs. Inventory management and customer acquisition costs heavily influence profitability timelines.

 

SaaS (Software as a Service)

  • Typical Fixed Costs: $5,000–$20,000 per month

  • Variable Costs: 15–25% of revenue

  • Average Break-Even Time: 12–24 months

  • Key Considerations: Development costs, server infrastructure, customer support, and sales teams form the bulk of expenses. High initial development costs often extend break-even timelines despite strong margins.

 

Consulting Services

  • Typical Fixed Costs: $2,000–$5,000 per month

  • Variable Costs: 10–20% of revenue

  • Average Break-Even Time: 1–6 months

  • Key Considerations: Low overhead and minimal variable costs enable faster break-even. Office space, software subscriptions, and contractor payments represent primary expenses.

 

Retail Store

  • Typical Fixed Costs: $10,000–$25,000 per month

  • Variable Costs: 40–60% of revenue

  • Average Break-Even Time: 12–24 months

  • Key Considerations: Physical location rent, inventory purchasing, staff wages, and utilities create substantial fixed costs. Foot traffic and location quality directly impact sales volume needed for break-even.

 

Manufacturing Business

  • Typical Fixed Costs: $15,000–$50,000 per month

  • Variable Costs: 50–70% of revenue

  • Average Break-Even Time: 18–36 months

  • Key Considerations: Equipment costs, facility expenses, raw materials, and skilled labor requirements drive high fixed and variable costs. Production volume and economies of scale significantly impact break-even calculations.

Advantages of Using This Tool

1. Multi-Currency Support
Calculate in USD, EUR, GBP, INR, or CAD with automatic conversion for global business planning.

2. Interactive Visual Chart
See revenue and cost lines intersect on a dynamic chart that updates with your inputs.

3. Adjustment Options
Toggle taxes, operational expenses, and marketing costs to see how additional expenses affect your break-even point.

4. Industry Benchmarks
Compare your results against preloaded examples from restaurants, e-commerce, SaaS, and other business types.

5. Calculation History
Save your calculations to localStorage and revisit them later for ongoing financial planning.

6. Target Profit Integration
Go beyond break-even to calculate units needed for specific profit goals.

Faqs

What is a break-even point?

The break-even point is the sales volume at which total revenue equals total costs. At this point, your business generates neither profit nor loss.

Divide your fixed costs by the contribution margin (selling price minus variable cost per unit). The result is the number of units you must sell to break even.

It helps you set sales targets, price products appropriately, manage costs, and assess business viability before launching or expanding.

Fixed costs are expenses that remain constant regardless of sales volume, such as rent, salaries, insurance, and loan payments.

Variable costs change directly with production or sales volume, including materials, direct labor, packaging, and shipping.

Yes. For services, define your “unit” as an hour of billable time, a client project, or a subscription. Variable costs might include contractor payments or software usage fees.

Contribution margin is selling price minus variable cost per unit. It represents how much each unit contributes to covering fixed costs and generating profit.

Higher prices increase contribution margin, reducing the number of units needed to break even. However, higher prices may reduce customer demand.

If variable cost exceeds selling price, you lose money on every unit sold. Your break-even point becomes impossible to reach regardless of sales volume.

A good break-even point is achievable given your market size and sales capacity. Lower break-even points generally indicate less financial risk.

Break-even analysis shows the volume needed for profitability but doesn’t predict actual sales. Combine it with market research for realistic projections.

Disclaimer

This calculator provides estimates based on the information you enter. Results are for informational and educational purposes only and should not replace professional financial advice. Business conditions vary, and actual break-even points may differ based on market factors, operational efficiency, and unforeseen expenses. Consult with a qualified financial advisor or accountant before making business decisions based on these calculations.

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