Calculate yield percentage by dividing edible portion weight by as-purchased weight. Essential for accurate recipe costing.
Yield percentage measures how much of a purchased ingredient is actually usable after trimming, peeling, deboning, or other preparation. The formula divides edible portion (EP) weight by as-purchased (AP) weight and multiplies by 100. A yield percentage of 75% means 25% of the product is waste.
This metric is foundational to accurate food costing. If you buy 10 pounds of whole salmon at $12/lb but the yield is only 60% after removing head, bones, and skin, your true cost per usable pound is $20 — not $12. Pricing a menu item based on the $12 figure would understate your food cost by 40%.
Professional kitchens conduct yield tests on every major ingredient and maintain a yield percentage database. This calculator makes it easy to compute yield from any pair of AP and EP weights, helping you build more accurate recipe costs and make smarter purchasing decisions.
Restaurant owners, hotel managers, and event coordinators depend on accurate yield percentage 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.
Yield percentage is the correction factor between what you pay and what you can serve. Without it, every recipe cost is an underestimate and every menu price is too low. This calculator helps you conduct yield tests quickly and convert the results into the percentage you need for accurate food costing.
Yield % = (EP Weight ÷ AP Weight) × 100 EP Cost = AP Cost ÷ (Yield % ÷ 100)
Result: 75.00%
Starting with 10 lbs of whole chicken (AP weight), you get 7.5 lbs of usable meat after deboning and trimming (EP weight). Yield % = (7.5 ÷ 10) × 100 = 75%. If the chicken costs $3.00/lb AP, the true EP cost is $3.00 ÷ 0.75 = $4.00/lb.
Weigh the product as received. Clean and process it exactly as you would for service. Weigh each component: usable portion (EP), trim that can be repurposed (like bones for stock), and true waste. Record all three values. Calculate yield percentage from the EP to AP ratio. Repeat on three separate deliveries and average.
Protein yields range widely: boneless chicken breast at 95%, whole chicken at 60%, whole fish at 45%. Produce varies too: iceberg lettuce at 75%, broccoli at 65%, carrots at 80%. Knowing these benchmarks helps you spot outliers that indicate poor quality or improper processing.
If a banquet needs 100 lbs of usable chicken and your yield is 60%, you need to order 100 ÷ 0.60 = 167 lbs of whole chicken. Reverse-engineering orders from EP needs prevents both shortages and excess purchasing.
Boneless skinless chicken breast: 95%. Whole chicken: 55-65%. Whole fish: 40-55%. Beef tenderloin (trimmed): 70-80%. Shell-on shrimp: 50-60%. Yields vary by supplier quality and product specifications.
No, standard yield percentage only covers fabrication and trimming. Cooking loss (shrinkage from heat) is calculated separately. Some kitchens track a combined "net yield" that includes both.
Published yield percentages are averages. Your actual yield depends on your equipment, staff skill level, product specifications, and how aggressively you trim. Your own data is always more accurate.
A cheaper product with lower yield may cost more per usable unit. Vendor A at $8/lb with 80% yield = $10/lb EP. Vendor B at $9/lb with 92% yield = $9.78/lb EP. The pricier product is actually cheaper to use.
Yes, significantly. An experienced butcher may achieve 5-10% higher yield than a junior cook on the same product. Standardize cutting techniques and check portioning regularly to maintain consistent yields.
Items like eggs, milk, flour, and sugar have essentially 100% yield. No yield adjustment is needed. Focus yield testing on items with significant trim — proteins, produce, and whole fish.