Quick Answer
A product costing $40 with a selling price of $60 has a $20 profit, a 50% markup, and a 33.33% margin.
Find Markup from Prices
Calculate Price from Markup %
Common Examples
| Input | Result |
|---|---|
| $40 cost, $60 selling price | $20 profit, 50.00% markup, 33.33% margin |
| $10 cost, $25 selling price | $15 profit, 150.00% markup, 60.00% margin |
| $100 cost, $150 selling price | $50 profit, 50.00% markup, 33.33% margin |
| $75 cost, 80% markup | $135 selling price, $60 profit, 44.44% margin |
| $200 cost, 100% markup | $400 selling price, $200 profit, 50.00% margin |
How It Works
This calculator uses the standard markup and margin formulas:
Markup = Selling Price - Cost
Markup % = (Markup / Cost) x 100
Margin % = (Markup / Selling Price) x 100
Where:
- Cost = the purchase price or production cost of the item
- Selling Price = the price charged to the customer
- Markup = the dollar amount added to cost (same as profit)
- Markup % = profit expressed as a percentage of cost
- Margin % = profit expressed as a percentage of selling price
Markup vs. Margin
Markup and margin both describe profitability but use different denominators. Markup divides by cost; margin divides by selling price. Because cost is always less than or equal to selling price (for profitable items), markup percentage is always greater than or equal to margin percentage for the same transaction. A 100% markup corresponds to a 50% margin. A 50% markup corresponds to a 33.33% margin.
Conversion formulas:
Markup % = Margin % / (1 - Margin % / 100) x 100
Margin % = Markup % / (1 + Markup % / 100) x 100
Reverse Calculation
To find the selling price from a known cost and desired markup percentage:
Selling Price = Cost x (1 + Markup % / 100)
This is useful when pricing products based on a target markup. For example, a 60% markup on a $50 cost yields a selling price of $50 x 1.60 = $80.
Worked Example
A retailer purchases inventory at $40 per unit and sells each unit for $60. Markup (dollar amount) = $60 - $40 = $20. Markup percentage = $20 / $40 x 100 = 50%. Margin percentage = $20 / $60 x 100 = 33.33%. The retailer adds 50% on top of the cost and retains 33.33 cents of every revenue dollar as gross profit. If the retailer wanted to price a $75 item at an 80% markup instead, the selling price would be $75 x 1.80 = $135, yielding $60 in profit and a 44.44% margin.
Related Calculators
Frequently Asked Questions
What is markup?
What is the difference between markup and margin?
How do I convert markup to margin?
What markup percentage should I use?
Can markup be negative?
Learn More
Markup vs margin: why they're different (and which to use)
Markup and margin describe the same dollar amount with different denominators. Confusing them leads to underpricing. Conversion table, formulas, and when to use each.
How to calculate gross profit margin (with examples)
Gross profit margin formula, worked examples for retail and SaaS, common mistakes, and what counts as cost of goods sold.
Business math: margin, markup, and break-even explained
Gross margin, profit margin, markup, and break-even are the four numbers every business owner needs. Formulas, worked examples, and the differences between them.
CalculateY