MOQ Break-Even Calculator

Calculate how many units you need to sell to break even on a minimum order quantity investment. Find break-even units and months to profitability.

About the MOQ Break-Even Calculator

Before committing to a supplier's minimum order quantity, every seller should know exactly how many units they need to sell — and how long it will take — to recoup their investment. The MOQ break-even point is where cumulative revenue minus all variable costs equals the total order investment.

This MOQ Break-Even Calculator determines the number of units you must sell to recover your full order cost, including product cost, shipping, duties, and any other upfront expenses. Enter your total order cost, selling price, and per-unit variable costs (marketplace fees, fulfillment, advertising). The calculator shows break-even units and estimated months to break even at your projected sales rate.

This analysis is crucial for new product launches where demand is uncertain. If the break-even point is 80% of the MOQ, you need to sell nearly the entire order just to get your money back — a risky proposition for an unvalidated product.

Why Use This MOQ Break-Even Calculator?

Break-even analysis quantifies the risk of an MOQ commitment. If break-even requires selling only 40% of the order, the risk is manageable. If it requires 90%, a single dip in demand could result in a loss. This clarity helps you make confident ordering decisions. Having a precise figure at your fingertips empowers better planning and more confident decisions.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the total order cost (product + shipping + duties + all upfront costs).
  2. Enter the selling price per unit.
  3. Enter variable costs per unit (marketplace fees, fulfillment, advertising).
  4. Enter the total number of units in the order (MOQ).
  5. Enter your expected monthly sales rate in units.
  6. Review break-even units, break-even percentage, and months to break even.

Formula

Contribution Margin per Unit = Selling Price − Variable Costs per Unit Break-Even Units = Total Order Cost / Contribution Margin per Unit Break-Even % = Break-Even Units / MOQ × 100 Months to Break Even = Break-Even Units / Monthly Sales Rate

Example Calculation

Result: 434 units to break even (43.4% of MOQ) — 2.2 months

Contribution margin is $24.99 − $10.00 = $14.99 per unit. Break-even: $6,500 / $14.99 = 434 units, or 43.4% of the 1,000-unit MOQ. At 200 units/month, break-even occurs in approximately 2.2 months. The remaining 566 units generate $8,484 in profit.

Tips & Best Practices

Break-Even Scenarios

Always model three scenarios: best case (you sell out in half the expected time), expected case (sales match projections), and worst case (sales come in at 50% of projections). If the worst case still breaks even within 6 months, the investment is relatively safe.

The Role of Time in Break-Even

A 3-month break-even is fundamentally different from a 12-month break-even even if both reach the same unit count. Faster break-even means your capital is recovered sooner and can be reinvested. Time-adjusted break-even using a discount rate provides a more sophisticated analysis.

Beyond Break-Even: Profit Potential

Don't stop at break-even — calculate the total profit if you sell 100% of the order. This is your upside scenario. Compare this potential profit against alternative investments of the same capital to determine if this product is the best use of your money.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good break-even percentage?

Ideally, break-even should be at 30–50% of the total order quantity. This provides a comfortable margin of safety. If break-even requires selling more than 70% of the order, the investment carries significant risk.

What counts as variable costs?

Variable costs include marketplace referral fees (8–15%), fulfillment fees (FBA or 3PL), payment processing, advertising cost per unit, and return/refund costs. These are costs that occur with each sale, not with the order itself.

How does advertising affect break-even?

Advertising dramatically impacts break-even for new products. If your ACoS (Advertising Cost of Sales) is 30% on a $25 product, that's $7.50 in ad cost per unit. This increases break-even units by 30–50% compared to organic-only sales.

Should I include return costs?

Yes. If your return rate is 5% and each return costs $10 to process, the per-unit return cost allocation is $0.50 ($10 × 5%). Include this in variable costs for accurate break-even. Categories with high return rates (clothing, electronics) need careful attention here.

What if I never reach break-even?

If sales are too slow to reach break-even within a reasonable timeframe (6–12 months), consider liquidating remaining inventory at a discount, bundling with other products, selling on secondary channels, or writing off the loss and learning from the experience. Document what went wrong so you can refine your demand forecasting and product selection criteria for future orders.

How does this relate to overall profitability?

Break-even is the minimum threshold for recovering your investment. Total profitability is determined by how many units you sell beyond break-even and the contribution margin on each. A product with low break-even and high post-break-even sales is ideal.

Should I calculate break-even per order or for the product overall?

Calculate per order for cash flow planning and overall for strategic product decisions. Per-order break-even tells you when this specific purchase pays for itself. Overall break-even includes all fixed costs like photography, listing setup, and brand registry.

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