Calculate trim loss percentage by dividing trim weight by as-purchased weight. Optimize prep efficiency and improve food costing.
Trim loss is the percentage of an ingredient that is removed during preparation before cooking — peels, stems, bones, fat, skin, cores, and bruised or damaged portions. This calculator divides the weight of discarded trim by the as-purchased weight and multiplies by 100 to give you the trim loss percentage.
Trim loss varies dramatically by ingredient. Boneless chicken breast has minimal trim loss (2-5%), while a whole pineapple may lose 40-50% to rind and core. Understanding these percentages is essential for converting as-purchased costs into edible-portion costs and for calculating the correct order quantities.
This tool helps kitchen managers and chefs track trim efficiency, identify opportunities to reduce waste, compare product specifications across vendors, and train prep staff on techniques that minimize unnecessary loss while maintaining quality standards.
Restaurant owners, hotel managers, and event coordinators depend on accurate trim loss 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.
Trim loss directly increases your effective ingredient cost. A 30% trim loss means you're paying for product you can't serve. This calculator helps you measure trim loss accurately, compare trim-heavy items against pre-processed alternatives, and identify prep staff who may be trimming more aggressively than necessary. Instant results let you test multiple scenarios so you can align pricing, staffing, and inventory decisions with current demand and cost pressures.
Trim Loss % = (Trim Weight ÷ AP Weight) × 100 Usable Yield % = 100 − Trim Loss %
Result: 30.00%
A 10-lb case of onions produces 3 lbs of trim (skins, ends, outer layers). Trim loss = (3 ÷ 10) × 100 = 30%. The usable yield is 70%, meaning 7 lbs are available for cooking from every 10-lb case.
Trim loss is the primary factor in converting as-purchased (AP) cost to edible portion (EP) cost. If onions cost $1.50/lb and have 30% trim loss, the EP cost is $1.50 ÷ 0.70 = $2.14/lb. Every recipe cost card should use EP costs, and trim loss data is how you calculate them.
Trim loss variation between cooks can be 5-15% for the same ingredient. Standardize prep techniques with photo guides, training sessions, and periodic spot-checks. The difference between 25% and 35% trim loss on 200 lbs of weekly onion usage is $42.90/week or over $2,200/year.
Not all trim is waste. Vegetable scraps make excellent stock, saving you $3-5 per gallon versus purchasing prepared stock. Protein trim can be ground for burgers, used in sausage, or served as staff meals. Tracking "repurposed trim" separately shows the true waste rate versus the fabrication loss rate.
Root vegetables: 15-25%. Leafy greens: 20-35%. Onions: 25-30%. Fresh herbs: 40-60%. Whole fish: 45-60%. Bone-in protein: 20-40%. Boneless protein: 2-10%. These vary by quality, freshness, and prep technique.
Trim loss occurs during cold preparation (cutting, peeling, deboning). Cooking loss occurs during heat application (shrinkage from moisture evaporation). Both reduce usable yield but at different stages.
Yes, within limits. Better knife skills, proper peeling tools, and training on how closely to trim reduce unnecessary waste. However, over-trimming can leave tough or unappetizing parts in the final product.
Focus on high-volume and high-cost items first. Track trim loss for your top 20 ingredients by spend, which typically cover 80% of food costs. Low-cost or low-volume items have minimal financial impact.
To get 50 lbs of usable onions with 30% trim loss, order 50 ÷ 0.70 = 71.4 lbs. Always reverse-calculate from EP needs to AP orders to avoid shortages or excess.
Repurpose when possible: vegetable trim for stocks and soups, protein trim for forcemeats or staff meals, citrus peels for zest or garnish. What truly can't be used should be composted rather than sent to landfill.