Calculator category
Business & Pricing Calculators
Calculate margin, markup, gross profit, break-even volume, unit pricing, and cost-plus pricing for practical business decisions.
Best starting points
Guides and comparisons
Use these explanations when you need the decision context behind a calculator, not just the final number.
Markup vs Margin
Markup and margin both compare price, cost, and profit, but they use different denominators. Markup is based on cost. Margin is based on selling price or revenue.
Gross Profit vs Profit Margin
Gross profit is a dollar amount. Profit margin is a percentage. Both use revenue and cost, but they answer different business questions.
Profit and pricing
Measure profit dollars, margin percentage, markup, and cost-plus selling prices.
Profit Margin Calculator
Calculate profit and margin percentage from revenue and cost.
Open profit margin calculatorGross Profit Calculator
Calculate gross profit dollars and gross margin percentage from revenue and cost.
Open gross profit calculatorMarkup Calculator
Calculate markup amount, markup percentage, and the related margin percentage.
Open markup calculatorCost Plus Pricing Calculator
Calculate selling price, profit per unit, and margin from cost plus target markup.
Open cost plus pricing calculatorUnit economics
Normalize prices and estimate the sales volume needed to cover fixed costs.
Sales cost context
Estimate flat commission when sales payouts affect pricing or profitability.
Common tasks
Related categories
Move between calculator families when the next question depends on a different type of input.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which business calculator should I start with?
Use profit margin for revenue-and-cost percentage analysis, markup for cost-based pricing analysis, and break-even when fixed costs and unit volume matter.
Is markup the same as margin?
No. Markup divides profit by cost, while margin divides profit by revenue or selling price.
Do these tools replace accounting software?
No. They are focused calculators for pricing and planning assumptions, not full accounting, tax, or inventory systems.