๐ Business Finance Tool
Revenue Calculator
Sales Revenue · Profit · Margin
Calculate total revenue, cost of goods sold, gross profit, and profit margin. Add tax and discount for accurate business insights.
revenue calculator
sales revenue calculator
gross profit
profit margin
Calculator
Unit Price (₹) ₹500
₹
Quantity Sold 100
Cost per Unit (COGS) ₹300
₹
Discount (%) 0%
%
Tax (%) 0%
%
Currency
Total Revenue
₹50,000
before tax & discount
Gross Profit
₹20,000
revenue - COGS
Net Profit (after tax)
₹20,000
after tax & discount
Profit Margin
40.0%
gross profit / revenue
Gross Profit Margin
40%
๐ Breakdown: Revenue ₹50,000 - COGS ₹30,000 = Gross Profit ₹20,000. Discount applied: 0%, Tax: 0%.
Industry Benchmarks
Average Gross Profit Margins by Sector
| Industry | Typical Gross Margin | Revenue per Unit (example) |
|---|---|---|
| Retail (Apparel) | 40-55% | $50 |
| Software (SaaS) | 70-85% | $100/month |
| Manufacturing | 20-35% | $200 |
| Food & Beverage | 30-45% | $15 |
| Consulting | 50-70% | $150/hour |
How to Use
Revenue = Price × Quantity
๐น Total Revenue = Unit Price × Quantity Sold
๐น Gross Profit = Total Revenue − (Unit Cost × Quantity)
๐น Net Profit = Gross Profit − Discount Amount + Tax on Revenue (tax applied on revenue after discount)
๐น Profit Margin = (Gross Profit / Total Revenue) × 100
๐น Gross Profit = Total Revenue − (Unit Cost × Quantity)
๐น Net Profit = Gross Profit − Discount Amount + Tax on Revenue (tax applied on revenue after discount)
๐น Profit Margin = (Gross Profit / Total Revenue) × 100
Discount is applied to total revenue before tax. Tax is applied on the discounted revenue.
FAQs
What is included in COGS?+
Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) includes direct material, labor, and manufacturing overhead. It does not include operating expenses like rent or marketing.
How do I calculate profit margin correctly?+
Gross profit margin = (Revenue – COGS) / Revenue × 100. Our calculator shows both gross margin and net profit after tax/discount.
Can I use this for service-based business?+
Absolutely. Set Unit Price as your service fee, Quantity as number of hours/projects, and Cost per Unit as your direct costs per service.