Calculate the revenue needed to break even using the contribution margin ratio method. Ideal for service businesses and multi-product companies.
The Break-Even Revenue Calculator determines the total sales dollars needed to cover all costs. Unlike break-even in units, this approach uses the contribution margin ratio (CMR) and is ideal for service businesses, multi-product companies, or any scenario where counting individual units is impractical.
Break-even revenue = Fixed Costs / CM Ratio. This simple yet powerful formula lets you calculate the revenue threshold where your business transitions from loss to profit. The calculator also determines the revenue required to hit any target profit and shows your margin of safety as a percentage and dollar amount.
Whether you run a consulting firm, restaurant, online store with hundreds of SKUs, or any mixed-revenue business, this calculator gives you a clear revenue target for profitability.
Entrepreneurs, finance teams, and small-business owners gain a competitive edge from accurate break-even revenue 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.
Many businesses can't easily count "units" — a restaurant sells meals of different prices, a consultant sells hours at varying rates, an e-commerce store has thousands of products. Break-even revenue using the CM ratio approach works universally. It tells you the total dollar sales needed and integrates naturally with financial forecasting and budgeting.
CM Ratio = (Revenue − Variable Costs) / Revenue Break-Even Revenue = Fixed Costs / CM Ratio Target Profit Revenue = (Fixed Costs + Target Profit) / CM Ratio Margin of Safety ($) = Actual Revenue − Break-Even Revenue Margin of Safety (%) = Margin of Safety ($) / Actual Revenue × 100
Result: $500,000 break-even revenue, 40% CM ratio
CM = $800K − $480K = $320K. CM Ratio = $320K / $800K = 40%. Break-even revenue = $200K / 0.40 = $500K. For $80K target profit: ($200K + $80K) / 0.40 = $700K. Margin of safety = ($800K − $500K) / $800K = 37.5%, or $300K cushion before losses begin.
Annual break-even can feel abstract. Converting to monthly targets makes it actionable. If annual break-even is $500K, monthly is roughly $41,700. But seasonal businesses should weight this: if January is 5% of annual sales and December is 15%, target $25K in January and $75K in December rather than a flat $41.7K each month.
Service businesses (consulting, agencies, professional services) typically have high CM ratios (60–80%) because their main variable cost is subcontractor or freelance labor. However, they also tend to have high fixed costs (full-time salaries). Break-even revenue = Total Payroll & Overhead / CM Ratio. A consulting firm with $500K fixed costs and 65% CMR needs $769K revenue to break even.
Accounting break-even includes non-cash expenses like depreciation. Cash flow break-even excludes them, giving the revenue needed to cover actual cash outflows. Cash flow BE is always lower than accounting BE by the amount of D&A divided by CMR. Both metrics are important for different planning purposes.
Use revenue-based when you sell multiple products/services at different prices, sell services where "units" are hard to define, or want a dollar target for financial planning. Use unit-based when you sell a single product or need to know how many units to produce.
CM ratio can change due to price adjustments, input cost changes, or shifts in product mix. Recalculate break-even whenever significant changes occur. For annual planning, use the expected weighted-average CM ratio. For sensitivity analysis, compute break-even at high, mid, and low CM ratios.
Some costs are semi-variable: a base amount plus a per-unit amount (e.g., utilities, phone plans). Split these into their fixed and variable components using the high-low method or regression analysis. Classify the fixed portion as fixed costs and the variable portion with variable costs.
Yes, for accrual-based break-even. Depreciation is a real economic cost of using capital assets. However, for cash flow break-even, exclude depreciation (and amortization) since they're non-cash. Cash flow break-even = (Fixed Costs − D&A) / CM Ratio.
Operating leverage measures how much profit changes relative to revenue changes. High operating leverage (high fixed costs, high CM ratio) means bigger swings: above break-even, profits grow fast; below it, losses mount quickly. Degree of operating leverage = CM / Operating Profit at a given revenue level.
Break-even revenue is your minimum budget target. Set your sales budget above break-even by your desired margin of safety (typically 20–40%). Your expense budget should ensure fixed costs stay at or below the level assumed in break-even. Monitor both monthly to catch deviations early.