Calculate the selling price, markup percentage, and profit from cost. Convert between markup and margin, and find the right price for your product or service.
Markup is the amount added to the cost of a product or service to arrive at the selling price. Expressed as a percentage of cost, it is the fundamental tool behind cost-plus pricing — the most straightforward pricing strategy used by retailers, wholesalers, and service providers worldwide.
This calculator works in two directions: enter your cost and desired markup percentage to find the selling price, or enter cost and selling price to find the markup percentage. It also displays the equivalent margin percentage, so you can compare the same profit from both perspectives.
Understanding markup is critical for any business that buys and resells goods. A 100% markup means you sell for double what you paid. A 50% markup means you add half the cost. Retailers commonly use different markup rates for different product categories, and this calculator helps you evaluate the profitability of each pricing decision.
Entrepreneurs, finance teams, and small-business owners gain a competitive edge from accurate markup data when setting prices, forecasting revenue, or managing operational costs. Save this tool and revisit it each quarter to keep your financial plans aligned with current market realities.
If you set prices without understanding your markup, you risk pricing too low (leaving money on the table) or too high (losing customers to competitors). This calculator gives you instant clarity on how cost, markup, selling price, and margin all relate.
It is particularly useful when evaluating supplier quotes, pricing new product lines, or converting between markup and margin during financial discussions. Many people confuse the two — this calculator shows both side by side.
Selling Price = Cost × (1 + Markup% / 100) Markup% = ((Selling Price − Cost) / Cost) × 100 Profit = Selling Price − Cost Margin% = (Profit / Selling Price) × 100 Price Multiplier = 1 + Markup% / 100
Result: Selling Price: $120 | Profit: $45 | Margin: 37.5%
An item costing $75 with a 60% markup: Selling Price = $75 × 1.60 = $120. Profit = $120 − $75 = $45. Margin = $45 / $120 = 37.5%. The 60% markup translates to a 37.5% margin — always lower than the markup percentage.
Cost-plus pricing (applying a fixed markup to cost) is the simplest pricing strategy. Its advantage is predictability — you always know your profit per unit. Its disadvantage is that it ignores demand and competition. A product might sell for much more or much less than your cost-plus price depending on perceived value. Use cost-plus as a floor price and adjust upward based on market conditions.
Markup 15% = Margin 13%. Markup 25% = Margin 20%. Markup 33.3% = Margin 25%. Markup 50% = Margin 33.3%. Markup 75% = Margin 42.9%. Markup 100% = Margin 50%. Markup 150% = Margin 60%. Markup 200% = Margin 66.7%. Memorizing these common conversions will help you think fluidly between the two frameworks.
Modern businesses increasingly use dynamic pricing — adjusting markup based on demand, time of day, inventory levels, and competitor prices. Airlines, hotels, and ride-sharing services are obvious examples, but retailers are adopting it too via algorithmic pricing tools. Even with dynamic pricing, understanding your base markup ensures you never sell below cost.
There is no single standard. Grocery stores mark up 25-50%, clothing retailers 50-100%, restaurants 200-350% on food, and specialty retail can go 100-400%. The "right" markup depends on your industry, competition, overhead costs, and perceived value.
Markup is profit as a percentage of COST. Margin is profit as a percentage of SELLING PRICE. Same profit, different denominator. Example: Buy at $50, sell at $100. Markup = 100%. Margin = 50%. Markup is always higher than margin for the same transaction.
Margin = Markup / (1 + Markup). For example, a 50% markup (0.50): Margin = 0.50 / 1.50 = 0.333 = 33.3%. Conversely, Markup = Margin / (1 − Margin). A 33.3% margin: Markup = 0.333 / 0.667 = 50%.
Absolutely. A 200% markup means the selling price is 3× the cost. This is common in restaurants (food cost 30%), jewelry, and luxury goods. Software has near-infinite markup since the marginal cost of each copy approaches zero.
Keystone pricing means a 100% markup (selling price = 2× cost). It was traditionally the standard in retail. While less common now due to competition, it remains a baseline for many product categories.
Add overhead per unit to your cost before applying markup. If a product costs $50 and overhead is $20/unit, your total cost is $70. Apply markup to $70, not $50. Alternatively, ensure your markup covers both COGS and a share of overhead by using a higher percentage.