📊

Free US Business Break-Even Point Calculator: Analysis & Formula

Calculate your Break-Even Point (BEP), Margin of Safety, and Degree of Operating Leverage. Built for US product and service businesses to analyze unit economics, optimize pricing strategy, and benchmark against national industry averages.

🏢 Rent / Lease
$
👥 Salaries / Wages
$
🛡️ Insurance
$
💻 Software / Subscriptions
$
🏦 Loan Payments
$
📣 Marketing / Advertising
$
⚡ Utilities
$
➕ Other Fixed Costs
$
Total Monthly Fixed Costs $0
$
Price charged per unit before returns or discounts
$
Materials, packaging, direct labor, shipping per unit
$ /mo
Reveals units & revenue needed to hit your profit goal
$ /mo
Unlocks Margin of Safety, Time-to-BEP & DOL outputs
Compares your CM ratio against the US industry average
⚠️
📊 Your Break-Even Analysis

Enter your fixed costs, selling price, and variable cost per unit — then click Calculate Break-Even Point to unlock your full analysis including BEP, Margin of Safety, Operating Leverage, and industry benchmarking.

Break-Even Revenue (Monthly)
Break-Even Units
per month
Contribution Margin
per unit
CM Ratio
of revenue
Operating Leverage (DOL)
Total Fixed Costs
per month
Time to Break-Even
enter current revenue
🎯 Target Profit Analysis
Units Needed for Target
Revenue Needed for Target
Extra Units Beyond BEP
Target Profit Margin
🛡️ Margin of Safety
Current Monthly Revenue
Margin of Safety ($)
Margin of Safety (%)
Current Monthly Profit/Loss
📊 Your CM Ratio vs. Industry Average
Your CM%
Industry
📈 Break-Even Analysis Chart — Revenue vs. Total Cost
🔍 What-If Sensitivity Analysis — Break-Even Units

See how your Break-Even Point shifts as selling price and variable costs change. Green row = your current scenario. ⚠️ = contribution margin is zero or negative — business cannot break even at that combination.

💡 How to read this table: Each row shows a different selling price scenario. Each column shows a different variable cost scenario. The cell value is the number of units you’d need to sell each month to break even under that combination.
⚙️ Calculator Guide

How to Use the Break-Even Analysis Calculator for Financial Planning

This calculator uses standard US Cost–Volume–Profit (CVP) formulas as defined under US GAAP managerial accounting to compute your exact break-even point, plus six bonus metrics no other free online calculator offers — all powered by Big.js to eliminate floating-point rounding errors.

Break-Even Units
Fixed Costs Contribution Margin
Break-Even Revenue
Fixed Costs CM Ratio (%)
Target Profit Units
Fixed Costs + Target Profit Contribution Margin
Margin of Safety
Current Sales − BEP Sales Current Sales × 100

🔀 Step 0: Choose Your Business Mode (Product vs. Service Revenue)

🏭 Product Business Mode
  • Best for manufacturers, retailers, wholesalers, e-commerce stores
  • Enter a Selling Price per Unit (what customers pay)
  • Enter Variable Cost per Unit — materials, packaging, shipping, COGS
  • Results shown as units/month to break even
  • Sensitivity table shows unit combinations across price/VC scenarios
💼 Service Business Mode
  • Best for consultants, agencies, freelancers, contractors, clinics
  • Enter Hourly Rate or Project Rate instead of unit price
  • Enter Variable Cost per Hour / Project — subcontractors, tools, per-project software
  • Results shown as billable hours or projects/month to break even
  • All formulas are identical — only the labels change to match your business model

📋 Steps 1–6: Defining Your Fixed Costs, Variable Costs & Selling Price

1
📋 Itemize Your Fixed Monthly Costs

Fixed costs are expenses your business pays every month regardless of how many units you sell or hours you bill. The calculator gives you 8 predefined cost categories — Rent/Lease, Salaries/Wages, Insurance, Software/Subscriptions, Loan Payments, Marketing/Advertising, Utilities, and Other. You can leave any field at $0 if it doesn’t apply.

Why itemize instead of one field? Most business owners underestimate fixed costs by forgetting line items. Itemizing forces a complete picture and feeds a more accurate break-even point.

Used in: All calculations Common mistake: Forgetting software & loan payments
2
💰 Enter Selling Price & Variable Cost

Your Selling Price is what a customer pays per unit or per billable hour. Your Variable Cost is what it costs you to deliver that one unit or hour — raw materials, direct labor, packaging, per-order shipping, payment processing fees, or subcontractor charges.

Contribution Margin = $Price $Variable Cost = $CM per unit
CM Ratio = CM ÷ Price × 100 = X% of revenue
Unlocks: BEP, CM Ratio, DOL Required field
3
🎯 Enter a Target Monthly Profit (Optional)

Break-even only tells you when profit = $0. But you’re not in business to break even — you’re in business to make money. Enter a Target Monthly Profit (e.g., $5,000/mo) and the calculator shows how many additional units or hours you must sell to reach that specific profit goal.

Target Units = (Fixed Costs + Target Profit) ÷ CM → units/mo
Unlocks: Target Profit Panel Shows: Extra units beyond BEP, target margin
4
📈 Enter Current Monthly Revenue (Optional)

This is the most powerful optional input. Entering your current monthly revenue unlocks four additional outputs at once: Margin of Safety ($), Margin of Safety (%), Current Monthly Profit or Loss, and Time to Break-Even in months (if you’re not yet at BEP).

MOS $ = Current Revenue − BEP Revenue → safety buffer
Time to BEP = BEP Revenue ÷ Current Revenue → months
Unlocks: Margin of Safety Panel + DOL Unlocks: Time to Break-Even
5
🏭 Select Your Industry (Optional)

Choose from 10 US industries — Retail, Food & Beverage, Manufacturing, Software/SaaS, Professional Services, Healthcare, Construction, E-Commerce, Hospitality, or Transportation. The calculator compares your Contribution Margin ratio against that industry’s average and gives you a clear verdict: above average, in line, or below average.

Why does this matter? A 40% CM ratio looks great in Construction (avg 22%) but below average in Software/SaaS (avg 72%). Context is everything.

Unlocks: Industry Benchmark Bar Shows: Verdict — above / in-line / below average
6
📊 Click Calculate — Review All Outputs

After clicking Calculate Break-Even Point, the results panel, break-even chart, and sensitivity table all render instantly. Every metric is computed using Big.js decimal math to guarantee accuracy regardless of the price or cost values you entered.

Use Download PDF to save a branded report for your records, lenders, or investors. Use Share on WhatsApp to send the key results to a business partner, accountant, or advisor instantly.

Outputs: 10+ metrics instantly Exports: PDF report + WhatsApp share

📈 Reading the Break-Even Chart: Total Revenue vs. Total Cost

📈
Revenue Line vs. Total Cost Line vs. Fixed Cost Line

Three lines. One intersection. That intersection is your entire business model summarized visually.

🟢 Revenue Line

Starts at $0 and rises at a constant slope equal to your selling price per unit. The steeper this line, the higher your price.

🔴 Total Cost Line

Starts at your fixed costs level (not $0) and rises at a slope equal to your variable cost per unit. It will always start above the revenue line.

⬜ Fixed Cost Line

A flat horizontal dashed line showing total fixed costs. It never changes with volume — this is the floor your revenue must clear before any profit is possible.

The exact point where the Revenue Line crosses the Total Cost Line is your break-even point. Every unit sold to the left of that crossing generates a loss (total cost exceeds revenue). Every unit sold to the right generates profit (revenue exceeds total cost). The wider the gap to the right, the more profitable your business becomes at higher volumes.

🔍 Using the What-If Sensitivity Table for Pricing Strategy

🔍
What-If Scenario Analysis — 25 Combinations at Once

The sensitivity table answers: “What happens to my break-even if prices or costs change?” — tested across five price scenarios and five variable cost scenarios simultaneously.

The table rows show your selling price at −20%, −10%, current, +10%, and +20%. The columns show your variable cost at −20%, −10%, current, +10%, and +20%. Each cell shows the break-even units required under that exact combination. The highlighted green row is always your current real scenario.

Price +20%Fewer units needed
Price +10%Fewer units needed
Current ✦Your real BEP
Price −10%More units needed
Price −20%Much more needed

Any cell showing ⚠️ N/A means that price/cost combination produces a zero or negative contribution margin — the business literally cannot break even at those inputs, no matter how many units are sold.

📖 Break-Even Metrics Glossary: Target Profit, DOL & Margin of Safety

📦 Break-Even Units

The minimum number of units or billable hours you must sell each month to cover all fixed and variable costs, resulting in exactly $0 profit.

Fixed Costs ÷ Contribution Margin
💵 Break-Even Revenue

The minimum monthly revenue your business must generate to cover all costs. Equivalent to Break-Even Units × Selling Price, also computed via CM ratio.

Fixed Costs ÷ CM Ratio
💰 Contribution Margin

The dollar amount each unit sold contributes toward covering fixed costs — and generating profit once fixed costs are covered. Higher is always better.

Selling Price − Variable Cost
📊 CM Ratio (%)

The percentage of each revenue dollar that goes toward fixed costs and profit. A CM ratio of 60% means $0.60 of every dollar in sales covers overhead and profit.

CM ÷ Selling Price × 100
🎯 Target Profit Units

How many units or hours you must sell to generate a specific profit goal above break-even. Only appears when you enter a Target Monthly Profit amount.

(Fixed Costs + Target Profit) ÷ CM
🛡️ Margin of Safety ($)

How far your current revenue can fall before hitting the break-even point. A positive figure means you have a buffer. A negative figure means you’re currently operating at a loss.

Current Revenue − BEP Revenue
🛡️ Margin of Safety (%)

The percentage by which current sales can decline before hitting break-even. A MOS of 30% means sales could drop by 30% before the business stops covering its costs.

MOS $ ÷ Current Revenue × 100
🔧 Degree of Operating Leverage

Measures how sensitive your operating profit is to a change in sales. A DOL of 4x means a 10% increase in sales produces a 40% increase in operating profit — and vice versa for decreases.

Total CM ÷ (Total CM − Fixed Costs)
⏱️ Time to Break-Even

At your current monthly revenue rate, how many months until you reach the break-even point. Particularly useful for startups and businesses in the early growth phase.

BEP Revenue ÷ Current Monthly Revenue
📉 Current Profit / Loss

Your estimated monthly operating profit or loss based on your current revenue. Shown in green if profitable, red if operating at a loss. Requires current revenue input.

(Current Revenue ÷ Price × CM) − Fixed Costs

📐 Interpreting Your Contribution Margin (CM) Ratio & Industry Benchmark

Performance Badge CM Ratio Range What it Means Typical Action
🟢 Excellent60%+ 60% and above Strong pricing power relative to variable costs. Common in Software/SaaS, consulting, and high-margin professional services. Each dollar of revenue goes mostly to profit after fixed costs are covered. Focus on growing volume — your cost structure is healthy. Consider reinvesting in growth.
🔵 Good40–59% 40% to 59% Solid margin structure. Common in manufacturing, healthcare, and established e-commerce businesses with controlled COGS. Business is efficient but has room for improvement. Monitor variable cost trends. Small improvements in procurement or pricing can meaningfully boost CM.
🟡 Fair25–39% 25% to 39% Typical in retail, food service, and e-commerce with high fulfillment costs. Business is viable but more sensitive to cost increases. Higher sales volume is required to cover fixed costs. Review variable costs line by line. Consider whether prices can be raised or supplier terms improved.
🔴 Low Margin<25% Below 25% Common in construction, transportation, and commodity businesses. Tight margins mean fixed costs require very high sales volume to cover. Business is highly sensitive to any cost increase or revenue dip. Prioritize reducing variable costs. Evaluate whether fixed cost structure can be reduced. Consider premium pricing tiers to improve CM.
🔬
Big.js Decimal Precision — Why It Matters for This Calculator

Standard browser JavaScript uses IEEE 754 floating-point math. This means that a price of $19.99 minus a cost of $9.99 can internally evaluate to 10.000000000000002 instead of exactly 10.00. On a small number of units this is invisible — but when calculating break-even across hundreds or thousands of units, or computing Degree of Operating Leverage ratios, these tiny errors compound into incorrect dollar amounts. This calculator uses Big.js for all core math operations — contribution margin, BEP units, BEP revenue, target profit units, margin of safety, DOL, and time-to-BEP — ensuring that every result is arithmetically exact, regardless of the decimal values you enter.

🇺🇸 Real US Business Examples

Real-World Break-Even Analysis Case Studies for US Small Businesses

These five examples show exactly how to use the Break-Even Point Calculator across different US business types — from a coffee shop in Austin to a SaaS startup in San Francisco. Each example uses real-world cost structures with full input breakdowns and complete result interpretations.

Sunrise Coffee Co. — Retail Coffee Shop (Fixed Cost Heavy)

📍 Austin, Texas  |  🏭 Product Business Mode  |  Industry: Food & Beverage

🟡 Fair Margin
📋 Calculator Inputs
🏢 Rent / Lease$3,500
👥 Salaries / Wages$8,000
🛡️ Insurance$400
💻 Software / POS$150
🏦 Loan Payments$800
📣 Marketing$300
⚡ Utilities$600
➕ Other (supplies)$250
Total Fixed Costs$14,000
Avg. Selling Price
$6.50
per cup / order
Variable Cost
$2.10
beans, milk, cup, lid
Optional Inputs
🎯 Target Monthly Profit$5,000
📈 Current Monthly Revenue$22,000
🏭 Industry SelectedFood & Bev
📊 Calculator Results
💵
Break-Even Revenue (Monthly)
$20,682 / month
3,182 cups/month · 106 cups/day to break even
Break-Even Units
3,182 cups
per month
Contribution Margin
$4.40
per cup sold
CM Ratio
67.7%
of each sale to fixed costs
Operating Leverage
8.4x DOL
high leverage at current sales
🎯 Target Profit — $5,000/mo Goal
Cups Needed for $5,000 Profit4,318 cups/mo
Revenue Needed$28,068/mo
Extra Cups Beyond BEP+1,136 cups
Target Profit Margin17.8%
🛡️ Margin of Safety (Current Revenue: $22,000)
Margin of Safety ($)$1,318/mo
Margin of Safety (%)6.0%
Current Monthly Profit+$1,318/mo ✅
💡 Key Takeaway: At $22,000/mo revenue Sunrise Coffee is profitable but only by a thin 6% margin of safety. They are currently selling approximately 3,385 cups/month. To hit their $5,000 profit target they need to sell 933 more cups per month — roughly 31 extra cups per day. Adding one high-margin revenue stream such as whole-bean retail bags ($15/bag, ~$2 variable cost) could significantly shift their BEP without adding labor.
💼

Pixel North Agency — Freelance Digital Marketing (Service Business)

📍 New York, New York  |  💼 Service Business Mode  |  Industry: Professional Services

🟢 Excellent Margin
📋 Calculator Inputs
🏢 Office / Home Office$2,000
👥 Salaries (1 staff)$5,500
🛡️ Insurance (E&O)$300
💻 Software / Tools$500
🏦 Loan Payments$0
📣 Marketing / Outreach$500
⚡ Utilities$200
➕ Other (accounting)$500
Total Fixed Costs$9,500
Hourly Rate
$150
per billable hour
Variable Cost/hr
$25
tools, subcontractors
Optional Inputs
🎯 Target Monthly Profit$8,000
📈 Current Monthly Revenue$18,000
🏭 Industry SelectedProf. Services
📊 Calculator Results
⏱️
Break-Even Revenue (Monthly)
$11,400 / month
76 billable hours/month · 3.8 hrs/day to break even
Break-Even Hours
76 hrs
billable per month
Contribution Margin
$125.00
per billable hour
CM Ratio
83.3%
of revenue retained
Operating Leverage
1.71x DOL
moderate leverage
🎯 Target Profit — $8,000/mo Goal
Hours Needed for $8,000 Profit140 hrs/mo
Revenue Needed$21,000/mo
Extra Hours Beyond BEP+64 hrs
Target Profit Margin38.1%
🛡️ Margin of Safety (Current Revenue: $18,000)
Margin of Safety ($)$6,600/mo
Margin of Safety (%)36.7%
Current Monthly Profit+$5,500/mo ✅
💡 Key Takeaway: Pixel North has an outstanding cost structure — a 83.3% CM ratio and a 36.7% margin of safety means revenue could drop by over a third before hitting break-even. Their challenge is getting from $18,000/mo to $21,000/mo to hit the $8,000 profit target, which requires billing just 140 hours total — only 7 extra hours per day across a 20-day work month above current output.
📦

VitalForm Supplements — DTC E-Commerce Brand (Unit Economics)

📍 Miami, Florida  |  🏭 Product Business Mode  |  Industry: E-Commerce

🟢 Excellent Margin
📋 Calculator Inputs
🏢 Warehouse / 3PL$4,200
👥 Salaries (2 staff)$12,000
🛡️ Insurance$600
💻 Shopify + Tools$800
🏦 Loan Payments$1,500
📣 Marketing / Ads$3,000
⚡ Utilities$350
➕ Other (returns)$550
Total Fixed Costs$23,000
Selling Price
$49.99
per supplement bottle
Variable Cost
$16.50
COGS + shipping + fees
Optional Inputs
🎯 Target Monthly Profit$10,000
📈 Current Monthly Revenue$38,000
🏭 Industry SelectedE-Commerce
📊 Calculator Results
📦
Break-Even Revenue (Monthly)
$34,321 / month
687 units/month to cover all costs
Break-Even Units
687 bottles
per month
Contribution Margin
$33.49
per bottle sold
CM Ratio
67.0%
of revenue to fixed costs
Operating Leverage
6.4x DOL
high leverage
🎯 Target Profit — $10,000/mo Goal
Units Needed for $10,000 Profit986 bottles/mo
Revenue Needed$49,281/mo
Extra Units Beyond BEP+299 bottles
Target Profit Margin20.3%
🛡️ Margin of Safety (Current Revenue: $38,000)
Margin of Safety ($)$3,679/mo
Margin of Safety (%)9.7%
Current Monthly Profit+$2,465/mo ✅
💡 Key Takeaway: VitalForm is profitable but operating on a thin 9.7% margin of safety — a 10% drop in revenue would put them below break-even. To hit $10,000/mo profit they need to sell 299 more bottles, which at $3,000/mo in current ad spend means evaluating their customer acquisition cost carefully. Reducing COGS by $2/bottle (negotiating with manufacturer) would drop BEP by ~41 units and add $1,540/mo to profit without changing revenue.
🪑

Ridge & Grain Workshop — Custom Furniture Maker (High Variable Cost)

📍 Nashville, Tennessee  |  🏭 Product Business Mode  |  Industry: Manufacturing

🟢 Excellent Margin
📋 Calculator Inputs
🏢 Workshop Rent$5,500
👥 Salaries (3 craftsmen)$18,000
🛡️ Insurance$900
💻 Design Software$200
🏦 Equipment Loan$2,200
📣 Marketing$800
⚡ Utilities$1,200
➕ Other (tools/maint.)$400
Total Fixed Costs$29,200
Avg. Selling Price
$850
per custom piece
Variable Cost
$310
wood, hardware, finish
Optional Inputs
🎯 Target Monthly Profit$15,000
📈 Current Monthly Revenue$51,000
🏭 Industry SelectedManufacturing
📊 Calculator Results
🪑
Break-Even Revenue (Monthly)
$45,944 / month
54 custom pieces/month to cover all costs
Break-Even Units
54 pieces
per month
Contribution Margin
$540.00
per piece sold
CM Ratio
63.5%
of revenue to overhead
Operating Leverage
2.6x DOL
moderate leverage
🎯 Target Profit — $15,000/mo Goal
Pieces Needed for $15,000 Profit82 pieces/mo
Revenue Needed$69,700/mo
Extra Pieces Beyond BEP+28 pieces
Target Profit Margin21.5%
🛡️ Margin of Safety (Current Revenue: $51,000)
Margin of Safety ($)$5,056/mo
Margin of Safety (%)9.9%
Current Monthly Profit+$3,230/mo ✅
💡 Key Takeaway: Ridge & Grain is profitable but only narrowly — a 9.9% margin of safety means losing just 5–6 orders per month would eliminate all profit. Their heavy fixed labor cost ($18,000/mo for 3 craftsmen) creates a high BEP of 54 pieces. Their path to the $15,000 target profit requires 28 additional pieces/month — achievable if they can grow output to 82 pieces without adding fixed staff, possibly by hiring a part-time contractor (keeping that cost variable rather than fixed).
💻

FormFlow AI — B2B SaaS Startup (High Gross Margin & DOL)

📍 San Francisco, California  |  🏭 Product Business Mode  |  Industry: Software / SaaS

🔴 Pre-BEP — Loss Phase
📋 Calculator Inputs
🏢 Office / Co-Working$3,800
👥 Salaries (3 staff)$28,000
🛡️ Insurance$500
💻 Cloud / Infrastructure$2,000
🏦 Loan Repayment$0
📣 Marketing / Content$4,000
⚡ Utilities$300
➕ Other (legal, admin)$1,400
Total Fixed Costs$40,000
Monthly Sub. Price
$99
per user / month
Variable Cost/User
$8
cloud hosting + support
Optional Inputs
🎯 Target Monthly Profit$20,000
📈 Current Monthly Revenue$35,000
🏭 Industry SelectedSoftware / SaaS
📊 Calculator Results
💻
Break-Even Revenue (Monthly)
$43,516 / month
440 subscribers needed · currently 354 · gap: 86 users
Break-Even Users
440 users
at $99/mo subscription
Contribution Margin
$91.00
per user per month
CM Ratio
91.9%
world-class SaaS margin
Time to Break-Even
1.24 months
at current revenue rate
🎯 Target Profit — $20,000/mo Goal
Users Needed for $20,000 Profit659 users/mo
Revenue Needed$65,241/mo
Extra Users Beyond BEP+219 users
Target Profit Margin30.7%
⚠️ Margin of Safety (Current Revenue: $35,000)
Margin of Safety ($)−$8,516/mo
Margin of Safety (%)−24.3%
Current Monthly Loss−$7,890/mo 🔴
Time to BEP1.24 months at current growth
💡 Key Takeaway: FormFlow AI is currently pre-BEP and losing $7,890/month — but this is completely normal for an early-stage SaaS. Their 91.9% CM ratio means every new subscriber adds $91 of pure contribution toward fixed costs. They need just 86 more paying users to break even. If they’re adding 30–40 users/month at their current $4,000/mo marketing spend, they are approximately 2–3 months from profitability. At 659 users they hit $20,000/mo profit — a clear, quantified growth milestone.
💡 Expert Guidance

5 Pro Tips to Lower Your Break-Even Point & Reach Profitability Faster

Knowing your break-even point is only the first step. These five expert strategies — used by US CFOs, controllers, and business advisors — show you how to actively lower your BEP, protect your margin of safety, and reach profitability faster.

TIP 01

🔄 Reduce Monthly Fixed Costs & Overhead Expenses

The single most powerful structural lever to lower your break-even point permanently.

⚡ Medium — Strategic

Your break-even point is determined by one formula: Fixed Costs ÷ Contribution Margin. That means there are only two levers to lower BEP — increase contribution margin or reduce fixed costs. The most durable way to reduce fixed costs is to restructure them as variable costs, so your expense base shrinks automatically during slow months.

  • 1
    Replace full-time staff with contractors. A $8,000/month salaried employee is a fixed cost. The same workload delivered by a $55/hour contractor becomes a variable cost — you only pay when there’s work. This alone can reduce BEP by hundreds of units in labor-heavy businesses.
  • 2
    Shift from leased space to co-working or per-use facilities. A $4,500/month office lease is fixed. A $500/month hot-desk membership or production-on-demand arrangement scales with your output and lowers your fixed cost floor significantly.
  • 3
    Move from annual software subscriptions to usage-based pricing. Many SaaS tools now offer pay-per-seat or consumption pricing. Consolidating underused fixed software licenses saves $200–$800/month for most small businesses — pure BEP reduction.
  • 4
    Use commission-only or revenue-share sales structures. A salaried sales rep is a $5,000+/month fixed cost. A 15% commission arrangement converts that entirely to variable — you only pay when revenue is generated, perfectly aligning cost with output.
📐 BEP Impact — $2,000 Fixed Cost Reduction Example
Before — Fixed Costs$14,000/mo
After — Shift $2,000 to Variable$12,000/mo
Contribution Margin (unchanged at $40/unit)$40.00
BEP Before350 units/mo
BEP After ↓300 units/mo
Units Saved Per Month−50 units ✅
⚠️ Watch Out: Converting fixed costs to variable often increases your per-unit variable cost, which lowers your contribution margin. Always re-run your BEP calculation after any cost structure change to confirm the net effect is actually positive before committing.
⚡ Highest Impact Lever
🔄 Fixed-to-Variable Opportunities
Full-time staff → contractors High Impact
Office lease → co-working High Impact
Annual SaaS → usage-based Medium
Salary sales → commission High Impact
Owned equipment → leased Medium
In-house fulfillment → 3PL Medium
💡 CFO Rule of Thumb

US CFOs targeting lean cost structures aim to keep fixed costs below 50% of total cost at break-even volume. If your fixed costs are above 70% of total costs at BEP, your business is structurally fragile and highly sensitive to any revenue dip.

🧮 Try It in the Calculator

Go back to the Fixed Cost Itemizer above, reduce Salaries by $1,000–$2,000, increase Variable Cost by an equivalent per-unit amount, then click Calculate again to see your new break-even point and sensitivity table update in real time.

TIP 02

💰 Negotiate Lower Variable Costs with US Suppliers

A 10% price increase on the same fixed cost base has a dramatically larger impact on BEP than most business owners realize.

✅ Easy — High ROI

Most business owners instinctively try to grow their way out of a high break-even point by selling more units. But a price increase directly expands the contribution margin per unit, meaning every unit sold covers a larger share of fixed costs. The math is asymmetric — a modest price increase of 10–15% almost always reduces BEP by a much larger percentage, especially in high fixed-cost businesses.

  • 1
    Use the Sensitivity Table in this calculator. The table shows your BEP at price +10% and +20% scenarios instantly. In most businesses, a 10% price increase reduces break-even units by 15–25%. This is your fastest and cheapest BEP improvement lever.
  • 2
    Test price increases on your highest-margin products or services first. If you offer multiple SKUs or service tiers, raise prices on the ones with the highest current demand and least price sensitivity. Use the revenue gain to build pricing confidence before rolling changes wider.
  • 3
    Justify the price increase with added value — not just inflation. Adding a free onboarding session, extended warranty, premium packaging, or a bundled service gives customers a reason to accept higher prices without pushback. The perceived value increase costs far less than the revenue gain.
  • 4
    Calculate your maximum allowable volume loss. Before raising prices, use this formula to know how much customer attrition you can absorb and still break even at the same or lower BEP than today.
📐 Price Increase vs. BEP — Real Impact ($40 CM → $48 CM)
Original Price / VC / CM$80 / $40 / $40
Price After +10% / VC / CM$88 / $40 / $48
Fixed Costs (unchanged)$14,000/mo
BEP Before350 units/mo
BEP After Price +10% ↓292 units/mo
BEP Reduction−58 units (−16.6%) ✅
💡 Max Acceptable Volume Loss Formula: You can afford to lose up to (New CM − Old CM) ÷ New CM × 100% of your customers and still break even at the same point. A CM increase from $40 to $48 means you can lose up to 16.7% of volume and still match your original BEP.
💰 Fastest BEP Reduction Method
📊 Price Change Impact on BEP
Price +5% (CM 50% → 52%) −9.6% BEP
Price +10% (CM 50% → 55%) −18.2% BEP
Price +15% (CM 50% → 57%) −26.1% BEP
Price +20% (CM 50% → 60%) −33.3% BEP
⚠️ Price Increase Don’ts
Raise prices without testing elasticity firstRisky
Raise all prices simultaneouslyCaution
Increase price without adding perceived valueRisky
Ignore competitor pricing benchmarksCaution
🧮 Try It in the Sensitivity Table

Scroll to the What-If Sensitivity Table in your results. The column labeled Price +10% shows your BEP under a 10% price increase — compare it to your current BEP row to instantly see the unit reduction.

TIP 03

📅 Optimize Your Selling Price to Expand Contribution Margins

A break-even analysis done once at startup and never revisited is a dangerous illusion of financial clarity.

✅ Easy — Critical Habit

Your BEP is a living number — it changes every time your rent increases, you hire a new employee, your supplier raises material costs, or you adjust your pricing. Most US small business owners calculate BEP once during planning and never revisit it, making their margin of safety invisible until a loss appears on the P&L. Monthly recalculation takes less than 3 minutes with this calculator.

  • 1
    Create a monthly BEP review ritual. On the first business day of each month, update your fixed cost itemizer with any changes from the prior month and re-enter your actual average selling price and variable cost. This gives you a real-time BEP for the month ahead.
  • 2
    Track your BEP trend line over 6–12 months. A rising BEP month-over-month without a corresponding rise in contribution margin is an early warning signal. Most businesses that experience cash crises had a rising BEP trend 3–6 months before the crisis became visible.
  • 3
    Recalculate immediately after any major cost event. New hire, lease renewal, equipment purchase, supplier price increase, or a sales team expansion — each of these shifts your BEP materially and should trigger an immediate recalculation before the change takes effect.
  • 4
    Add your actual monthly revenue to unlock Margin of Safety. The Margin of Safety % is your most actionable monthly KPI — it tells you exactly how much buffer you have. A MOS below 10% is a warning zone. Below 0% means you’re operating at a loss.
📅 Monthly BEP Health Check — What to Monitor
Margin of Safety %Target: >20%
CM Ratio vs. last monthTarget: Stable or rising
BEP vs. last monthTarget: Stable or falling
Fixed Costs as % of RevenueTarget: <60% at BEP
DOL (Operating Leverage)Target: <5x for stability
🚨 Red Flag Pattern: If your BEP is rising AND your margin of safety is shrinking month-over-month for three consecutive months, your business is in structural deterioration — not just a seasonal dip. This pattern requires immediate action on either the cost side or the pricing side before it becomes a cash crisis.
📅 Takes 3 Minutes Monthly
📊 Margin of Safety Benchmarks
MOS above 30% 🟢 Excellent
MOS 20% – 30% 🔵 Good
MOS 10% – 20% 🟡 Monitor
MOS 0% – 10% 🟠 Warning Zone
MOS below 0% 🔴 Operating at Loss
✅ Monthly Review Checklist
Update fixed cost itemizer
Check avg. selling price for changes
Verify variable cost per unit
Enter current month revenue
Download PDF for records
TIP 04

🔧 Shift Fixed Costs to Variable Costs Where Possible

High operating leverage is a growth amplifier — but it’s also a loss amplifier. Know your DOL before signing any new fixed cost commitment.

🎓 Advanced — Financial Strategy

The Degree of Operating Leverage (DOL) measures how sensitive your operating profit is to changes in revenue. A DOL of 5x means a 10% increase in revenue produces a 50% increase in operating profit — but equally, a 10% revenue decrease wipes out 50% of your profit. Understanding your DOL before taking on new fixed costs (leases, hires, equipment) is a critical risk management discipline.

  • 1
    Check your DOL output in this calculator. A DOL above 5x at your current revenue level means your business is highly sensitive to any revenue decline. Before adding any new fixed cost, recalculate your DOL with the new cost included and verify the risk is acceptable.
  • 2
    Use DOL to set your recession stress test threshold. Multiply your DOL by the maximum revenue decline you think is realistic in a bad quarter. If DOL is 6x and revenue could drop 15%, your profit could drop 90% — test whether your business can survive that before making fixed cost commitments.
  • 3
    Reduce DOL before entering a volatile market or season. If you know Q1 is always slow, try to reduce your fixed cost base in Q4 — move to part-time staffing, pause annual subscriptions, or defer discretionary fixed expenses — so your DOL is lower going into the revenue trough.
  • 4
    Exploit high DOL when you are growing fast. A DOL of 8x is terrifying in a declining market but extraordinary in a growth phase — every 10% revenue increase delivers 80% profit growth. The key is knowing which phase you’re in and structuring costs accordingly.
📐 DOL Formula & Stress Test Example
DOL FormulaTotal CM ÷ Operating Profit
Current Revenue$30,000/mo
Fixed Costs$20,000/mo
Contribution Margin Total$25,000/mo
Operating Profit$5,000/mo
DOL5x
Stress: Revenue −15% → Profit impact−75% profit ⚠️
⚠️ Watch Out: Many US business owners sign multi-year leases or add permanent headcount during a strong revenue month — which maximizes fixed costs and therefore DOL — right before a seasonal slowdown. Always calculate what your DOL will be at your lowest monthly revenue before committing to any new fixed cost.
🔧 Critical Pre-Scaling Check
📊 DOL Risk Interpretation
DOL 1.0x – 2.0x Low Risk
DOL 2.1x – 4.0x Moderate Risk
DOL 4.1x – 7.0x High Risk
DOL above 7.0x Very High Risk
📋 Before Signing Any New Fixed Cost
Add new cost to Fixed Cost Itemizer
Check new BEP vs. current BEP
Check new DOL vs. current DOL
Run DOL × worst revenue scenario
Confirm MOS stays above 15%
TIP 05

📊 Focus Sales Efforts on High-Margin Product Lines

A blended break-even number hides which products are funding your business and which ones are quietly draining it.

⚡ Medium — High Insight

When you run a single break-even calculation across your entire business, you get an average that masks the individual economics of each product or service. Many businesses discover — only after running segment-level BEP analysis — that one product line is consistently profitable while another requires the profitable line to subsidize it. Eliminating or repricing the underperforming segment can cut overall BEP by 20–40%.

  • 1
    Run this calculator separately for each major product or service. Assign direct fixed costs (dedicated staff, equipment, storage) to each segment and use its specific selling price and variable cost. This reveals which segments are genuinely profitable and which depend on subsidization from others.
  • 2
    Identify your CM ratio by product line. Sort your products or services from highest CM ratio to lowest. The top 20% by CM ratio typically generate 60–80% of your contribution toward fixed costs. These are your “BEP anchors” — protect and grow them first.
  • 3
    Apply the 80/20 rule to your product mix. If 20% of your products generate 80% of contribution margin, ask what would happen to your overall BEP if you discontinued the bottom 30% by CM ratio. In most multi-product businesses this reduces fixed cost overhead and lowers total BEP significantly.
  • 4
    Shift your sales focus to high-CM products before adding fixed costs. If you’re planning to hire or expand, first verify that the incremental revenue will come from your highest-CM products. Adding revenue from low-CM products at a higher fixed cost base often makes overall BEP worse despite the revenue growth.
📐 Product Line BEP Comparison — 3 SKU Example
Product A — Price $120 / VC $30CM: $90 (75%)
Product B — Price $65 / VC $40CM: $25 (38%)
Product C — Price $25 / VC $20CM: $5 (20%)
Shared Fixed Costs: $10,000/mo
BEP if only selling Product A112 units ✅
BEP if only selling Product B400 units ⚠️
BEP if only selling Product C2,000 units 🔴
💡 Pro Insight: Most US businesses that run this analysis for the first time discover at least one product or service with a contribution margin below 20% — meaning it requires enormous volume to justify its existence. The question is never “should we keep this?” but “can we reprice it to a viable CM, or should we discontinue and reallocate resources to our high-CM anchor products?”
📊 Reveals Hidden P&L Drains
📋 Signs You Need Segment BEP Analysis
Revenue is growing but profit isn’tKey Signal
You sell 3+ different products/servicesKey Signal
Some months BEP is hit, others notWarning
High revenue but low CM ratio overallKey Signal
New products added without repricingWarning
✅ Segment BEP Action Plan
List all products / service tiersStep 1
Run calculator for each separatelyStep 2
Rank by CM ratio highest → lowestStep 3
Identify sub-20% CM productsStep 4
Reprice or discontinue low-CM itemsStep 5
Apply These 5 Tips Right Now — Your Calculator Is Ready Above ↑

Use the Break-Even Point Calculator to immediately test what happens to your BEP when you apply any of these five strategies. Adjust your fixed cost itemizer, change your selling price, or enter your current revenue — and watch every metric update in real time.

  • Reduce fixed costs → test new BEP instantly
  • Raise price +10% → check sensitivity table
  • Enter current revenue → unlock Margin of Safety
  • Check DOL before adding any new fixed cost
  • Run a separate calc for each product line
↑ Back to Calculator
❓ Frequently Asked Questions

US Business Break-Even Point & Profitability FAQs

Every question US business owners, students, and finance professionals ask about Break-Even Point — from basic formulas to advanced operating leverage strategy. Search or browse by category below.

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📘

Basic Break-Even Concepts & Profitability Thresholds

5 Questions

The Break-Even Point (BEP) is the exact level of sales — measured in either units or revenue dollars — at which a business’s total revenue equals its total costs, resulting in zero profit and zero loss. It is the minimum threshold a business must cross to avoid a financial loss.

Think of it as the floor of your business: below BEP, every unit sold costs you money. At BEP, you cover all costs exactly. Above BEP, every additional unit sold generates pure profit equal to the contribution margin per unit.

💡 US SBA Definition: The SBA defines BEP as “the point at which total cost and total revenue are equal, meaning there is no loss or gain for your small business.”
Definition Fundamental

Knowing your BEP is critical for six core business decisions:

  • Pricing strategy: Ensures your selling price is set high enough to cover all costs
  • Startup viability: Determines if your business model can realistically break even at achievable sales volumes
  • Loan and investor presentations: Banks and investors require BEP analysis to assess financial viability
  • Cost control: Reveals the direct impact of every fixed cost increase on how many sales you need
  • Hiring decisions: Shows you exactly how many more units you need to sell to cover a new salary
  • Profit planning: The foundation for setting realistic revenue targets and profit goals
⚠️ According to the US SBA, 82% of business failures are linked to poor cash flow management — the majority of which stem from businesses not knowing their break-even threshold.

The Break-Even Point is where profit equals exactly $0 — you are neither making money nor losing it. Profitability begins the moment your revenue exceeds your BEP.

Every unit or dollar of revenue beyond the BEP generates profit equal to the contribution margin on that unit. For example, if your BEP is 500 units and your contribution margin is $40/unit, selling unit #501 puts $40 directly into profit.

Profit = (Units Sold − BEP Units) × Contribution Margin per Unit
Breaking even is not the goal — it is the minimum survival threshold. Your goal is always a margin of safety above BEP to create a buffer against slow months, unexpected costs, or market downturns.

There are seven key moments when BEP analysis is essential:

  • Before launching a business: Validate that your business model can break even at realistic sales volumes
  • Before launching a new product or service: Determine the minimum sales volume required to justify the launch
  • Before signing any new fixed cost commitment: Lease, hire, equipment purchase — run BEP before committing
  • Before raising or lowering prices: Quantify the exact impact on units required to break even
  • Monthly — as an ongoing health check: Track your actual margin of safety against your BEP
  • When applying for SBA loans or investor funding: Required in most US business financing applications
  • During a revenue downturn: Determine how long you can sustain operations before hitting a loss

There are three main types of break-even analysis used in US business and finance:

  • Accounting BEP: The most common — where total revenue equals total accounting costs (fixed + variable). This is what this calculator computes.
  • Cash BEP: Where cash inflows equal cash outflows. This ignores non-cash charges like depreciation, making it a more conservative measure of operational survival threshold.
  • Economic BEP: The highest threshold — where revenue covers total costs AND delivers the same return the owner could have earned by investing that capital elsewhere (opportunity cost). Used in investment analysis and advanced financial modeling.
💡 For day-to-day US small business management, the Accounting BEP is the standard metric used by CPAs, lenders, and the SBA. Use Cash BEP when evaluating short-term liquidity survival.
🧮

The Break-Even Formula & Calculation Methods

6 Questions

There are two BEP formulas — one for units and one for revenue dollars:

BEP (Units) = Fixed Costs ÷ Contribution Margin per Unit
BEP (Revenue $) = Fixed Costs ÷ Contribution Margin Ratio

Example: A business has $10,000/month in fixed costs, sells at $50/unit, and has a variable cost of $20/unit:

  • Contribution Margin = $50 − $20 = $30/unit
  • CM Ratio = $30 ÷ $50 = 60%
  • BEP (Units) = $10,000 ÷ $30 = 334 units/month
  • BEP (Revenue) = $10,000 ÷ 0.60 = $16,667/month
Both formulas always agree: 334 units × $50 = $16,700 ≈ $16,667 (rounding difference). Use units for production planning, revenue $ for financial reporting.

For multi-product businesses, use the weighted average contribution margin method:

  1. Calculate the CM per unit for each product
  2. Determine each product’s percentage of total expected sales (sales mix %)
  3. Multiply each product’s CM by its sales mix % and sum the results = Weighted Average CM
  4. Divide total fixed costs by the Weighted Average CM to get overall BEP in units
  5. Multiply overall BEP units by each product’s sales mix % to get individual BEP units
Weighted Avg CM = Σ (CM per Product × Sales Mix %)
⚠️ Pro Tip: Run our calculator separately for each product using its individual price, variable cost, and a proportional share of total fixed costs. This gives you cleaner product-level BEP analysis than the weighted average method.

Use the revenue-based BEP formula, which uses the Contribution Margin Ratio (CM Ratio) instead of CM per unit:

BEP (Revenue $) = Total Fixed Costs ÷ CM Ratio
CM Ratio = (Selling Price − Variable Cost) ÷ Selling Price × 100

Example: Fixed costs = $18,000, Price = $75, Variable Cost = $30:
CM = $45 | CM Ratio = 60% | BEP (Revenue) = $18,000 ÷ 0.60 = $30,000/month

The revenue-based BEP is particularly useful for service businesses where “units” are difficult to define, and for financial reporting where management thinks in revenue terms rather than units.

This is called the Target Profit formula — an extension of the standard BEP formula that adds your desired profit to the numerator:

Target Units = (Fixed Costs + Target Profit) ÷ CM per Unit
Target Revenue = (Fixed Costs + Target Profit) ÷ CM Ratio

Example: Fixed costs = $12,000, CM = $40/unit, Target Profit = $8,000:
Target Units = ($12,000 + $8,000) ÷ $40 = 500 units/month
Regular BEP = $12,000 ÷ $40 = 300 units — so you need 200 extra units to hit your profit goal.

Enter your target profit in the Advanced Inputs field of our calculator above — it automatically shows target units, revenue, and the extra units beyond BEP.

A BEP chart plots three lines on a graph with units on the X-axis and dollar amounts on the Y-axis:

  • Revenue Line: Starts at $0 and rises linearly — slope equals the selling price per unit
  • Total Cost Line: Starts at the fixed cost amount (Y-intercept) and rises — slope equals variable cost per unit
  • Fixed Cost Line: A horizontal line at the fixed cost amount — never changes with volume

The intersection of the Revenue Line and Total Cost Line is your Break-Even Point. To the left of that point = loss zone (costs exceed revenue). To the right = profit zone (revenue exceeds costs). The vertical gap between the two lines in the profit zone represents your profit at that unit volume.

💡 The interactive Break-Even Chart in our calculator shows all three lines with hover tooltips — scroll up to see it after calculating.

Break-Even Sensitivity Analysis (also called What-If Analysis) tests how your BEP changes when you vary one or more key inputs — typically selling price and variable cost — while keeping fixed costs constant.

It answers questions like: “If my supplier raises material costs by 10%, how many more units do I need to break even?” or “If I raise my price by 15%, how much does my BEP drop?”

The output is typically a matrix table where rows represent different price scenarios and columns represent different variable cost scenarios — each cell shows the BEP in units under that combination.

Our calculator automatically generates a 5×5 Sensitivity Table (±10%, ±20% on both price and VC) with every calculation — the green row highlights your current scenario.
📋

Managing Inputs: Fixed vs. Variable Cost Classification

4 Questions

Fixed costs are expenses that remain constant regardless of how many units you produce or sell. They are incurred whether you sell zero units or 10,000 units in a given month.

Common US small business fixed costs include:

  • Rent / commercial lease payments
  • Salaried employee wages and payroll taxes
  • Business insurance premiums
  • Software subscriptions (Shopify, QuickBooks, CRM, etc.)
  • Loan / equipment financing payments
  • Marketing retainers or fixed advertising budgets
  • Utilities (base monthly amounts)
  • Depreciation on equipment
  • Accounting and legal retainers
⚠️ Gray Area: Some costs are “semi-fixed” — they are fixed within a range but jump at certain production levels (e.g., you hire a second employee when volume doubles). For BEP purposes, include them at their current level and recalculate when the cost structure changes.

Variable costs change in direct proportion to sales or production volume. The more units you sell, the higher your total variable costs — but the per-unit cost remains constant.

Common variable cost examples by business type:

  • Product Business: Raw materials, packaging, direct labor (hourly), shipping/fulfillment, credit card processing fees, sales commissions
  • Restaurant / Food: Food ingredients, disposable packaging, paper goods, direct kitchen labor per order
  • E-Commerce: COGS, Shopify transaction fees, Amazon FBA fees, shipping, returns processing
  • Service Business: Subcontractor costs, software per client, direct tool costs per project
  • SaaS: Cloud hosting per user, payment processing fees, customer support per ticket

Yes — absolutely. If you want your BEP to reflect a financially sustainable business, you must include a market-rate owner’s salary in your fixed costs. Many business owners skip this and calculate a falsely low BEP that doesn’t account for the cost of their own labor.

There are two valid approaches:

  • Approach 1 — Include owner salary in fixed costs: Add your desired monthly salary to the Salaries row in the fixed cost itemizer. This is the recommended approach for any business planning or loan application.
  • Approach 2 — Calculate BEP without owner salary, then add salary-based profit target: Set your desired monthly salary as the Target Profit input instead. Both methods produce the same total units/revenue required.
⚠️ A business that “breaks even” but doesn’t pay the owner is not truly breaking even — it is exploiting the owner’s unpaid labor. Always include a realistic owner compensation in your BEP calculation.

Use your Average Net Selling Price — the actual revenue you receive per unit after discounts, returns, and allowances, but before cost of goods.

Avg Net Selling Price = Total Net Revenue ÷ Total Units Sold (last 3 months)

For tiered pricing or subscription models with different plan levels, calculate a weighted average:

  • Multiply each price tier by its % of total customers
  • Sum the results to get your blended average selling price
  • Use this blended price in the BEP calculator
🚨 Common Mistake: Using your list price (MSRP) instead of your actual average realized price. If you regularly discount 15–20%, your actual BEP is materially higher than what a list-price calculation would show.
📊

Key Metrics: Margin of Safety & Operating Leverage Explained

5 Questions

The Contribution Margin (CM) is the amount left from each unit’s selling price after subtracting the variable cost. It is the amount each unit “contributes” toward covering fixed costs — and toward profit once fixed costs are covered.

CM per Unit = Selling Price − Variable Cost per Unit
CM Ratio = CM per Unit ÷ Selling Price × 100

The CM Ratio is the percentage of each revenue dollar that goes toward fixed costs and profit. A CM Ratio of 60% means $0.60 of every dollar of revenue is available to cover fixed costs — the remaining $0.40 covers variable costs.

💡 CM Ratio is the most important single metric for comparing the financial efficiency of different products or service offerings. Always prioritize selling the highest CM Ratio products first.

The Margin of Safety (MOS) measures how far your current revenue is above the break-even point. It tells you exactly how much your revenue can fall before you start losing money — your financial buffer against downturns, slow seasons, or unexpected costs.

Margin of Safety ($) = Current Revenue − Break-Even Revenue
Margin of Safety (%) = MOS $ ÷ Current Revenue × 100

Benchmarks for US small businesses:

  • MOS > 30% = Excellent — strong buffer against downturns
  • MOS 20–30% = Good — comfortable operating range
  • MOS 10–20% = Monitor closely — limited buffer
  • MOS 0–10% = Warning zone — very thin buffer
  • MOS below 0% = Operating at a loss

The Degree of Operating Leverage (DOL) measures how sensitive your operating profit is to changes in revenue. It tells you the multiplier effect: a DOL of 4x means a 10% revenue increase produces a 40% profit increase — and a 10% revenue decrease produces a 40% profit decrease.

DOL = Total Contribution Margin ÷ Operating Profit (EBIT)

DOL is driven by the proportion of fixed to variable costs. Higher fixed costs = higher DOL = more financial risk in downturns, but more profit leverage in growth.

⚠️ DOL is infinite at exactly the break-even point (because operating profit = $0 and you’re dividing by zero). It decreases as revenue grows above BEP. Always calculate DOL at a specific, realistic revenue level — not at BEP.

A “good” CM Ratio varies significantly by industry. Here are US industry average CM ratios:

  • Software / SaaS: 70–85% — near-zero variable costs per user
  • Professional Services: 55–70% — primarily labor-based, low materials
  • Healthcare: 50–65% — high pricing power, moderate variable costs
  • Manufacturing: 35–50% — depends heavily on materials and labor intensity
  • E-Commerce: 35–55% — varies by product category and fulfillment model
  • Retail: 30–50% — highly competitive, margin pressure from large retailers
  • Food & Beverage: 25–45% — lower margins, high ingredient/labor costs
  • Construction: 15–30% — material-heavy, competitive bidding, thin margins
💡 Compare your CM ratio to your industry average using the Industry Selector in our calculator. A CM ratio significantly below your industry average signals either a pricing problem or a variable cost problem.

If you are currently operating below your break-even point, the time to break even depends on your current monthly revenue and your monthly revenue growth rate:

Time to BEP (months) = BEP Revenue ÷ Current Monthly Revenue

This formula assumes flat revenue — no growth. If your revenue is growing month-over-month, you’ll reach BEP sooner. For a growing startup like a SaaS company adding 30–40 users/month, you can estimate time to BEP by dividing the revenue gap by the monthly revenue growth rate.

Example: BEP = $43,500/mo, Current Revenue = $35,000/mo → Time to BEP = 43,500 ÷ 35,000 = 1.24 months at the current rate.

Enter your current monthly revenue in the calculator’s Advanced Inputs field — the Time-to-Break-Even metric updates automatically in the results panel.
🎯

Strategy & Financial Decision-Making

5 Questions

There are exactly three mathematical levers to lower your BEP — since BEP = Fixed Costs ÷ CM, you can only lower it by:

  • 1. Reduce Fixed Costs: Cut overhead, negotiate lease terms, convert fixed staff to contractors, eliminate unused software subscriptions. Every $1,000 reduction in monthly fixed costs reduces BEP by 1,000 ÷ CM per unit.
  • 2. Increase Selling Price: Even a 5–10% price increase dramatically reduces BEP by expanding CM per unit. Test with the Sensitivity Table in our calculator — a 10% price increase typically reduces BEP by 15–25%.
  • 3. Reduce Variable Cost per Unit: Renegotiate supplier pricing, improve production efficiency, reduce waste, find cheaper shipping partners, or switch from retail to wholesale sourcing.
💡 Fastest lever: Price increase (no cash required). Most durable lever: Fixed-to-variable cost conversion. Compounding lever: Raise price AND reduce variable cost simultaneously — the CM expansion compounds powerfully.

Absolutely yes — and this is one of the most practical daily uses of BEP analysis for US small businesses. A new employee is typically a fixed cost of $4,000–$12,000/month (salary + payroll taxes + benefits). Before hiring, ask: “How many more units do I need to sell monthly to cover this salary?”

Additional Units Required = New Monthly Salary ÷ CM per Unit

Example: You’re adding a $6,000/month employee and your CM per unit is $40:
Additional units needed = $6,000 ÷ $40 = 150 more units/month

The question then becomes: “Is it realistic to generate 150 more units/month from this hire?” If yes and within 3 months, it’s a justified hire. If you can’t reach that volume for 12+ months, the hire adds financial risk.

Yes — break-even analysis is a standard component of the financial projections required for SBA 7(a) and SBA 504 loan applications. Lenders use it to assess whether your business can generate sufficient revenue to service the debt without operating at a loss.

Specifically, lenders want to see:

  • Your monthly BEP in both units and revenue dollars
  • That your projected revenue is at least 20–30% above BEP (adequate margin of safety)
  • BEP with the new loan payment included in fixed costs (worst-case scenario)
  • Sensitivity showing BEP under conservative, base, and optimistic revenue scenarios
Use the Download PDF button in our calculator to generate a professionally formatted BEP report that you can include directly in your SBA loan application package.

BEP analysis is the most rigorous pricing validation tool available to small business owners. Here’s a four-step pricing process:

  1. Set your fixed costs and variable costs first — know your true cost structure before setting any price
  2. Set a minimum viable price: Your price must exceed variable cost (to generate any CM at all). Add at least a 30–40% CM ratio minimum as a floor
  3. Calculate BEP at your proposed price: Check that the BEP unit volume is achievable in your market
  4. Test the sensitivity: Use the What-If table to see how your BEP changes at price +5%, +10%, +15%. Often you can raise price 10–15% with minimal volume impact, dramatically reducing your BEP
⚠️ Never set prices based purely on competitor pricing without first verifying your own BEP. Matching a competitor’s price is irrelevant if your cost structure means that price puts you below break-even.

At minimum, recalculate your BEP in these situations:

  • Monthly: As a standard financial health check — update fixed costs for any changes and enter actual current revenue
  • Immediately after any fixed cost change: New hire, lease renewal, equipment loan, software subscription
  • Before any pricing change: Validate the impact on BEP before announcing new prices
  • After any supplier price change: Material cost increases directly affect your variable cost and CM
  • Before any major expansion: New location, new product line, new market entry
  • Quarterly at minimum for seasonal businesses: Use your lowest-revenue month as the stress test scenario

Businesses that monitor BEP monthly consistently demonstrate better financial outcomes than those who calculate it once annually during tax season.

🏭

Service vs. Product Business Break-Even Modes

3 Questions

Service businesses use the same BEP formula but replace “units” with billable hours or projects and “variable cost per unit” with the direct cost per billable hour (subcontractors, per-project software, direct materials per engagement).

BEP (Hours) = Fixed Costs ÷ (Hourly Rate − Variable Cost per Hour)

Example: A consultant with $8,000/month fixed costs, $150/hour billing rate, and $20/hour in direct costs (software, subcontractors):
CM per Hour = $150 − $20 = $130 | BEP = $8,000 ÷ $130 = 62 billable hours/month

For project-based service businesses, use average project revenue as “price” and average direct project costs as “variable cost.” Our calculator’s Service Business Mode relabels all inputs and outputs accordingly.

For SaaS and subscription businesses, BEP is calculated in number of active subscribers rather than units sold:

BEP (Subscribers) = Monthly Fixed Costs ÷ (MRR per User − Variable Cost per User)

Variable cost per user in SaaS is typically very low (cloud hosting, support cost per user, payment processing), giving SaaS businesses extremely high CM ratios of 70–92%.

Example: SaaS with $40,000/month fixed costs, $99/user/month pricing, $8/user in hosting + support:
CM = $91/user | BEP = $40,000 ÷ $91 = 440 subscribers

💡 SaaS businesses should also track MRR at BEP (440 × $99 = $43,560/month) and monitor actual MRR growth vs. BEP as their primary monthly financial KPI.

For e-commerce, the key is accurately capturing all variable costs — which are often underestimated. Your variable cost per unit should include:

  • Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) from supplier
  • Amazon FBA fees or Shopify transaction fees (typically 8–15% of selling price)
  • Shipping and fulfillment cost per order
  • Returns and refunds allowance (typically 2–8% of revenue)
  • Credit card processing fees (Stripe/PayPal: ~2.9%)
  • Packaging costs per unit
🚨 Common Mistake: E-commerce sellers often include advertising spend as a variable cost (cost per acquisition). However, for BEP purposes, fixed monthly ad budgets belong in Fixed Costs — only truly order-variable ad spend (like per-unit Amazon PPC) belongs in variable costs.
⚠️

Limitations of Standard Break-Even Analysis

2 Questions

BEP analysis is powerful but has important limitations every business owner should understand:

  • Assumes linear cost and revenue relationships: In reality, discounts, bulk pricing, and economies of scale mean costs and revenues don’t always change proportionally with volume
  • Assumes all units produced are sold: BEP doesn’t account for inventory buildup, waste, or unsold stock
  • Ignores time value of money: A BEP calculation doesn’t discount future cash flows — it’s a static snapshot
  • Doesn’t capture market demand limits: Reaching BEP mathematically is meaningless if the market can’t absorb the required volume at that price
  • Uses historical or estimated costs: BEP is only as accurate as the cost inputs — garbage in, garbage out
  • Doesn’t account for working capital: A business can be above BEP on paper but still run out of cash due to receivables timing
⚠️ BEP is a planning tool, not a guarantee. Use it alongside cash flow projections, market demand analysis, and competitive pricing research for complete financial decision-making.

These are the seven most common BEP calculation errors that lead to financial surprises:

  • 1. Excluding owner salary from fixed costs — creates a falsely optimistic BEP
  • 2. Using list price instead of net realized price — after discounts and returns, actual CM is lower
  • 3. Missing variable costs — especially payment processing fees, shipping, returns, and sales commissions
  • 4. Calculating BEP once and never updating it — BEP changes every time costs or pricing change
  • 5. Confusing revenue with profit — hitting BEP revenue doesn’t mean you’re profitable if variable costs were underestimated
  • 6. Using annual instead of monthly fixed costs — always use the same time period for all inputs
  • 7. Ignoring depreciation as a fixed cost — equipment depreciation is a real economic cost even though it’s non-cash
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Advanced Financial Planning & Target Profit Topics

2 Questions

Break-Even Analysis is a subset of CVP (Cost-Volume-Profit) Analysis. CVP analysis is the broader framework that examines how changes in costs, volume, and pricing all interact to affect profit — BEP is simply the specific point within CVP where profit equals zero.

CVP analysis answers a wider set of questions:

  • At what volume do we break even? (BEP)
  • At what volume do we hit our target profit? (Target Profit formula)
  • How does a 10% price change affect profitability at current volume? (Sensitivity)
  • What is the minimum price we can accept without losing money? (Floor pricing)
  • How does our product mix affect overall profitability? (Weighted CM analysis)
💡 This calculator covers the full CVP toolkit: BEP, Target Profit, Margin of Safety, Sensitivity Analysis, and Operating Leverage — making it a complete CVP tool, not just a BEP calculator.

BEP analysis plays a direct role in business valuations and investor due diligence in three ways:

  • Demonstrates financial viability: Investors and acquirers want to see that a business can realistically cover its costs at attainable sales volumes — the BEP unit count must be reachable given your market size and sales capacity
  • Reveals scalability via Operating Leverage: A high CM ratio combined with low fixed costs signals a scalable, high-leverage business model — exactly what growth investors look for. A 75% CM ratio means each new customer adds $0.75 in gross margin with near-zero incremental fixed cost
  • Validates unit economics: For VC-backed startups, BEP analysis feeds directly into cohort unit economics — LTV (Lifetime Value) vs. CAC (Customer Acquisition Cost) models use CM and BEP data as foundational inputs
For any investor pitch or M&A discussion, include your BEP, current Margin of Safety %, CM Ratio, and DOL alongside your P&L. These four metrics give a complete picture of your business’s financial structure and growth leverage.
Valuation Investors Advanced
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Please read this disclaimer carefully before using this calculator for any business, financial, legal, or investment decision.

📋 Last Updated: March 2026
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Not Professional Financial Advice

All results generated by this Break-Even Point Calculator are for educational and informational purposes only. They do not constitute financial advice, accounting advice, tax guidance, or legal counsel of any kind. No CPA, CFA, attorney, or licensed financial advisor relationship is created by using this tool.

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Estimates Are Based on Inputs Provided

All BEP, Contribution Margin, Margin of Safety, Operating Leverage, and Target Profit outputs are mathematical estimates based entirely on the numbers you enter. USFinanceCalculators.com cannot verify the accuracy of your inputs, and outputs will only be as accurate as the data you provide.

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Not a Substitute for Professional Analysis

Break-even analysis for critical business decisions — including SBA loan applications, investor presentations, business acquisitions, or major capital commitments — should always be prepared or reviewed by a licensed Certified Public Accountant (CPA) or qualified financial professional familiar with your specific situation and applicable US regulations.

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General Disclaimer: USFinanceCalculators.com provides this Business Break-Even Point Calculator as a free educational tool. The calculator applies standard US managerial accounting formulas based on US GAAP cost accounting principles, including those defined by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) and consistent with methodologies referenced in US Small Business Administration (SBA) resources. However, the results are simplified models that assume linear cost-volume-profit (CVP) relationships, a constant sales mix, and that all units produced are sold within the same period.

Limitations of Break-Even Analysis: Real-world business financials are subject to significant variability including seasonal demand fluctuations, price elasticity, supply chain cost changes, regulatory changes, and macroeconomic factors not captured by static BEP modeling. The industry CM ratio benchmarks displayed are sourced from publicly available aggregate data and may not reflect your specific market, geography, or business model. Always validate your cost structure with actual financial records.

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