Calculate the true cost per usable unit of any ingredient by dividing purchase price by usable units after trim and waste.
The price on an invoice is not the true cost of an ingredient. A $3.00 head of lettuce that yields only 12 usable ounces after trimming actually costs $0.25 per usable ounce — not the $0.19 per total ounce the invoice suggests. This calculator determines the real cost per usable unit by dividing the purchase price by the number of usable units you actually get after accounting for trim, peel, bones, fat, and other waste.
Understanding your true cost per usable unit is fundamental to accurate recipe costing. Every recipe cost card should use edible-portion costs, not as-purchased costs. The difference can be 15-40% for items with significant waste like whole fish, shell-on shrimp, or root vegetables.
This calculator helps chefs, kitchen managers, and purchasing teams make informed buying decisions and build recipe costs on real numbers rather than invoice prices.
Restaurant owners, hotel managers, and event coordinators depend on accurate ingredient cost per unit numbers to maintain profitability while delivering exceptional guest experiences. Return to this tool whenever menu prices, occupancy rates, or staffing levels shift to keep your operations on track.
Using as-purchased costs in recipe cards understates your true food cost by the waste percentage. This calculator converts invoice prices into usable-unit costs, giving you accurate numbers for recipe costing and vendor comparison. It also helps justify purchasing pre-trimmed items when labor and waste make whole products more expensive. Instant results let you test multiple scenarios so you can align pricing, staffing, and inventory decisions with current demand and cost pressures.
Cost per Usable Unit = Purchase Price ÷ Usable Units Usable Units = Total Purchased Units × (Yield % ÷ 100)
Result: $0.25
A case of romaine lettuce costs $45 and yields 180 usable ounces after trimming outer leaves and cores. The cost per usable ounce is $45 ÷ 180 = $0.25. This is the number to use in recipe cost cards.
Yield testing is the process of measuring how much usable product you get from a purchase. Weigh the as-purchased item, process it as you would for service, and weigh the result. Professional kitchens maintain yield test records for every frequently used ingredient and update them seasonally.
As-Purchased (AP) cost is the invoice price. Edible-Portion (EP) cost is the true cost per usable unit. The formula EP Cost = AP Cost ÷ Yield % converts between them. A $5.00/lb product with 80% yield has an EP cost of $6.25/lb. Always use EP costs in recipe cards.
Cost per usable unit is the key metric for deciding whether to buy whole or pre-processed ingredients. Compare the EP cost of whole products (including labor) against the EP cost of convenience products. Factor in consistency, storage, waste disposal, and labor availability.
Usable units are the amount of ingredient you can actually serve after removing inedible or unusable portions — bones, fat, skin, peel, core, bruised spots, and cooking losses. This is also called the edible portion (EP).
Perform a yield test: weigh the product as purchased, process it as you normally would (trim, peel, debone), then weigh the usable portion. Divide usable by total to get yield percentage.
It depends on your recipe costing approach. If your recipe specifies raw weights, use pre-cooking yield only. If recipes specify cooked weights, also account for cooking shrinkage.
Often yes. If a whole product costs $2.00/lb with 65% yield, the true cost is $3.08/lb usable. Pre-trimmed at $3.50/lb with 95% yield costs $3.68/lb usable — close enough that saved labor may tip the balance.
Use average yield from multiple tests. Seasonal produce can vary in yield by 10-15%. Test quarterly and use conservative estimates for costing to avoid underpricing.
Yes. A keg of beer has a higher yield percentage than bottled beer when accounting for foam and waste. Calculate cost per usable pour for accurate beverage costing.