Break-Even Point vs Margin

Break-Even Point vs Margin – 2024 Comparison Guide

Break-Even Point vs Margin

Learn when to use each metric and how they work together

Quick Definitions

Break-Even Point (BEP)

The volume (units or dollars) where total revenue equals total costs; profit is zero.

BEP Units = Fixed Costs ÷ (Price − Variable Cost)

Margin

The percentage or dollar amount of each sale that contributes to profit after covering variable costs.

Contribution Margin % = (Price − Variable Cost) ÷ Price × 100

Side-by-Side Comparison

Aspect Break-Even Point Margin
Focus Volume needed Profitability per unit
Output Units or dollars Percentage or dollars
Depends on Fixed + variable costs Only variable costs
Used for Sales targets, cash-flow Pricing, product mix

When to Use Each Metric

Use Break-Even When …

  • Setting minimum sales quotas
  • Planning cash-flow runway
  • Evaluating new equipment or hires
  • Negotiating loan covenants

Use Margin When …

  • Comparing product profitability
  • Setting discount limits
  • Deciding to drop or keep SKUs
  • Benchmarking against competitors

Worked Example

Data Set

  • Fixed costs: $20,000
  • Price: $50/unit
  • Variable cost: $30/unit

Break-Even Point

BEP Units = 20,000 ÷ (50 − 30) = 1,000 units

Margin

Contribution Margin % = (50 − 30) ÷ 50 = 40 %

Takeaway

Sell 1,000 units to break even, then keep 40 % of every extra sale as profit.

Compare BEP vs Margin Instantly

Break-Even Units:

Contribution Margin %: %

Profit per Unit After Break-Even: $

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