🔍 Markup Calculator
A markup calculator applies a percent on top of cost to reach a tentative sell price. Markup % = ((price − cost) ÷ cost) × 100 when inferring from known ticket—distinct from margin (profit ÷ revenue) and from percentage increase between two measurements.
Selling price = Cost × (1 + Markup% ÷ 100)
Typical uses: wholesale brackets, private-label COGS, and validating discount depth against list.
Cost-plus pricing. Markup is the percent you add to your landed cost to reach a shelf price—the numerator is profit dollars measured against cost, not revenue. Buyers still see the final ticket; this tool helps wholesalers and makers translate COGS into MSRP.
Contrast with margin, which divides profit by selling price. Same SKU can have a healthy markup and a thinner margin if competitive pricing caps the sell side. For reverse-engineering “what percent off was that?” from two prices, use discount rate.
Provide cost and markup percent below. For a known list price and desired margin target, start from margin or adjust cost assumptions manually.
Selling Price
$0.00
How to Calculate Markup
What is Markup?
Markup is the amount added to the cost price of goods to cover overhead and profit. It is expressed as a percentage of the cost. While related to "margin," markup specifically focuses on the relationship between your cost and your selling price.
The Formula
Selling Price = Cost + Markup Amount
Step-by-Step Example
Problem: A wholesaler buys a watch for $100 and applies a 40% markup.
Cost = $100
Markup = 40%
$100 × (40 / 100) = $40
$100 + $40 = $140
Use cases
- Private label goods: COGS plus contractual markup to MSRP.
- Craft manufacturing: labor + materials rolled into one cost base.
- Restaurant menus: plate cost to target price before comps.
- Agency retainers: fully loaded employee cost marked up for billable rate cards.
- Promotional planning: sanity-check how deep a discount can go before gross margin flips negative.
- Investor decks: translate vendor quotes into consistent ROI stories.
Markup vs. Margin
Many people confuse these two terms, but they are different:
- Markup is the percentage of the Cost. If you buy for $10 and sell for $15, you have a 50% markup ($5 is 50% of $10).
- Margin is the percentage of the Selling Price. In the same example ($10 cost, $15 sale), your margin is 33.3% ($5 profit is 33.3% of $15).
Pro Business Tips
- Keystone Pricing: A common retail rule of thumb where the product is marked up by 100% (doubling the cost).
- Pricing Psychology: Psychological pricing (like $9.99 instead of $10.00) can often allow for a slightly higher markup without decreasing sales volume.
- Consider Your Competitors: While your markup needs to cover your costs, it must also be competitive within your market.
Common mistakes
- Markup vs margin vocabulary: reporting margin percent while using markup math on cost.
- Denominator drift: dividing profit by selling price but still calling it markup.
- Ignoring fees: payment processing or returns can erase perceived ROI even when markup looks healthy.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between markup and margin?
Markup is the percentage added to cost to get selling price. Margin is the percentage of selling price that is profit.
How do I calculate markup percentage?
Markup % = ((Selling Price - Cost) / Cost) x 100.
What is a typical markup for retail products?
Retail markups vary widely: groceries 15-25%, clothing 50-100%, jewelry 50-300%.
How do I convert markup to margin?
Margin = markup ÷ (1 + markup) when both are expressed as decimals; use the margin calculator for repeated SKU checks.
Does shipping belong inside cost for markup?
Yes—landed cost should include freight and duties you cannot recover, otherwise true margin after fulfillment drifts.
When should I use percentage increase instead of markup?
Use percentage increase when comparing two observed values over time; markup always references cost on one SKU.
🔍 Authoritative References
For more information about business and financial calculations, consult these trusted sources:
- U.S. Small Business Administration - Official resources for business planning and financial management
- Bureau of Labor Statistics - Authoritative economic and employment data
- Federal Reserve Economic Data - Comprehensive U.S. economic statistics