A break-even calculator shows you exactly when you stop losing money and start making profit. Just enter your costs and selling price, and it quickly tells you how many units you need to sell to break even. It’s a simple but powerful way to plan pricing, control costs, and understand your business numbers better.
How the Break Even Calculator Works
Core Interaction
Enter three values: total fixed costs, variable cost per unit, and selling price. The tool instantly returns your break even point in both units and sales dollars — no submission, no refresh.
The calculation runs on contribution margin logic. Selling price minus variable cost gives the amount each unit contributes toward covering fixed overhead. Divide fixed costs by that figure and you have the exact sales volume where profit reaches zero.
That zero-profit threshold is the floor, not the destination. Every unit sold beyond it generates pure margin — and knowing exactly where the floor sits changes how you approach pricing, targets, and cost decisions.
Filters and Customization
Adjust any input and the result recalculates in real time. Raise the selling price to see how it compresses required volume. Increase variable costs to model rising supplier prices. Cut fixed costs to test a leaner structure before committing.
Alongside the numbers, the tool generates a break even graph. It plots total cost and total revenue across sales volumes, with the intersection marked clearly.
That visual — a cost-volume-profit chart — makes the margin zones above and below the threshold immediately readable. The tool runs fully in the browser, on any device, with no account and no usage limits.
Who Uses a Break Even Calculator and Why
Primary Audience Use Cases
Small business owners run this calculation constantly — usually informally and imprecisely. A retailer buying wholesale inventory needs to know how many units must sell before the purchase covers itself, including fixed overhead like rent.
This tool makes that figure exact. It returns the break even point in dollars of revenue the operation must hit before it stops absorbing a loss on that inventory cycle.
Product-based entrepreneurs launching a new item need unit economics settled before production begins. Entering production cost, shipping, and marketplace fees as variable costs — with development and setup as fixed — gives a minimum volume target.
That number informs production run size, ad budget, and the go or no-go decision itself. Pricing without it is a guess.
Digital advertisers use break even ROAS analysis to establish the minimum return a campaign must hit before it reaches profitability. A product at 40% gross margin requires a 2.5 ROAS before ad spend covers cost of goods.
Running this figure before setting optimization targets prevents the common mistake of chasing ROAS numbers that look strong but sit below the actual profit threshold.
Secondary and Unexpected Use Cases
Options traders apply break even analysis to find the price at which a position neither gains nor loses, factoring in premium paid and strike price. The cost-recovery logic matches the standard business formula closely enough that the same calculation framework applies.
Agency project managers use it to price service contracts with precision. Fixed overhead divided by the contribution margin per billable hour gives the minimum monthly capacity required to cover costs — a floor for hiring decisions and minimum contract values.
Founders evaluating funding runway use the break even point in sales revenue to define the monthly target that makes outside capital unnecessary. Knowing the exact revenue threshold allows backward planning to required monthly growth rates — a figure any serious investor will expect before the conversation advances.
How to Calculate Break Even ROAS
The math is straightforward. First, add up all your costs per product. Then plug them into this formula:
Break Even ROAS = Total revenue per product ÷ (Total revenue per product – Total costs per product)
Let me walk you through a real example.
Say you sell a product for €30. Your cost of goods is €8 and shipping costs are €2. Here’s how it works out:
30 ÷ (30 – 10) = 30 ÷ 20 = 1.5
This means any campaign with a ROAS above 1.5 makes you profit. Anything below 1.5 loses money. And at exactly 1.5, you break even.
Note: This example doesn’t include VAT. We’ll cover that next.
Formulas, Features, and Full Analysis Coverage
Break Even Formulas in Units and Revenue
The break even point in units formula divides total fixed costs by contribution margin per unit, where contribution margin equals selling price minus variable cost.
The break even point in sales dollars formula divides fixed costs by the contribution margin ratio — contribution margin per unit divided by selling price.
Both produce the same threshold expressed differently. One gives a unit count, the other a revenue target. The calculator returns both at once.
The break even price formula works in reverse. Given a target sales volume and a fixed cost structure, it solves for the minimum selling price that makes the business viable. This is the formula pricing strategists reach for when volume is constrained and the question shifts from how many to how much.
ROAS, Margin Ratios, and Advertising Break Even
Break even ROAS and the contribution margin ratio are two expressions of the same relationship between cost and revenue. A 35% gross margin requires a break even ROAS of 2.86 — every dollar of ad spend must return $2.86 before advertising contributes to profit rather than loss.
This figure changes every time product costs, fulfillment fees, or selling price shifts. Recalculating it before each campaign is not optional — it is the baseline the entire bidding strategy should rest on.
The break even ratio — fixed costs divided by revenue at full capacity — measures operating leverage rather than per-unit economics. Manufacturing operations, subscription businesses, and event venues use this ratio to benchmark what share of maximum capacity must be utilized before the operation covers its cost base.
Visual Output, Graph Generation, and Analysis Depth
The break even chart plots fixed cost, total cost, and total revenue across a range of sales volumes. The profit threshold appears at the intersection of the cost and revenue lines — clearly marked, not buried in a table.
That visual context matters. A single number tells you where the threshold is. The graph shows the margin at every volume level above and below it — information stakeholders need to understand the full picture.
No Excel template, separate analysis form, or additional tool is required. The calculator covers contribution margin, break even in units, break even in sales dollars, break even price, ROAS threshold, margin ratio, and scenario modeling — all in one place, instantly, in any browser.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the break even point formula used in accounting?
The standard formula divides total fixed costs by contribution margin per unit (selling price minus variable cost) to find break even in units. For break even in sales dollars, divide fixed costs by the contribution margin ratio. Both methods reach the same threshold measured in different terms.
How do I calculate break even ROAS before launching a campaign?
Divide one by your gross margin expressed as a decimal. At a 30% gross margin, your break even ROAS is 3.33 — every dollar of ad spend must return $3.33 in revenue before the campaign covers the cost of goods sold. Any ROAS below that number produces a net loss on advertising even when surface metrics look positive.
Is this break even calculator free with no signup?
Completely free, no account required, no usage limits. The tool runs in the browser and does not store or transmit any data you enter. Run as many cost, price, and volume scenarios as needed without restriction.
Can the calculator show the break even point in dollars instead of units?
Yes — both figures are returned simultaneously. The revenue figure uses the contribution margin ratio and is particularly useful for service businesses or variable-volume operations where counting individual units is not practical.
What is the difference between break even point and break even price?
Break even point is the sales volume — in units or revenue — where total costs equal total revenue. Break even price is the minimum selling price that covers all costs at a specific volume. One solves for quantity, the other for price, but both measure the same threshold of financial viability from a different direction.
How accurate is break-even analysis?
As accurate as your inputs. Underestimate variable costs or forget a fixed expense and your number will be off. Build in a cushion and revisit quarterly. Accuracy improves with experience.