FFXIV Crafting Materials Calculator

Enter recipe items and batch goals. Compare required inputs, crystals, gil, vendor costs, and leftovers. Export clean crafting plans for workshop projects fast today.

Calculator Inputs

Material Name Qty Per Craft Unit Cost Owned Stock

Example Data Table

Recipe Target Material Qty Per Craft Unit Cost Owned
Workshop Beam Set 24 Iron Ore 3 42 30
Workshop Beam Set 24 Maple Log 2 75 20
Workshop Beam Set 24 Linen Cloth 1 120 4
Workshop Beam Set 24 Wind Shard 4 12 40

Formula Used

Crafts Needed = ceil((Target Output / (Output Per Craft × Success Rate)) × (1 + Buffer %))

Required Material = max(0, (Crafts Needed × Qty Per Craft × (1 + Loss %)) − Owned Stock)

Line Cost = Buy Required × Unit Cost

Estimated Profit = (Target Output × Sale Price × (1 − Market Fee %)) − Total Cost

How To Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the recipe name and target output quantity.
  2. Add output per craft, success rate, buffer, and loss values.
  3. Enter each material with quantity per craft, unit cost, and owned stock.
  4. Add shard or crystal details for the recipe.
  5. Press calculate to view costs, required purchases, surplus, and profit.
  6. Use CSV for spreadsheets or PDF for a simple printable report.

Crafting Materials Planning For FFXIV

A good FFXIV crafting plan works like a construction takeoff. You list every input before work begins. Then you compare the plan with stock, prices, and expected output. This calculator helps you do that in one clean place.

Why Material Control Matters

Crafting often fails when small items are missed. A recipe may need ore, cloth, lumber, crystals, shards, and vendor goods. One missing stack can stop the whole batch. A clear list prevents waste. It also shows whether buying finished goods is cheaper than crafting.

Batch Crafting Strategy

Large batches need more than simple multiplication. You may add a buffer for failed attempts, market changes, or extra workshop orders. You can also add a loss rate for rounding, spoilage, or planning safety. The tool estimates required crafts, expected output, surplus items, and total time. This gives a practical view before you spend gil.

Cost And Profit Review

The calculator separates material cost from crystal cost. It also subtracts owned stock. This is useful when retainers, company chests, or inventories already hold many items. Sale price and market fee fields give a quick profit estimate. Use current market board values when accuracy matters. Vendor values can be entered as unit prices too.

Construction Style Workflow

In construction, estimators prepare bills of materials. This page uses the same idea for digital crafting. Each material row acts like a line item. Quantity per craft becomes the usage rate. Owned stock becomes available inventory. Unit cost becomes purchase price. The final report becomes your shopping list.

Best Practices

Update prices before each session. Keep rare materials on separate rows. Use clear names for shards and crystals. Add a buffer when planning expensive orders. Export the CSV when you want a spreadsheet. Save the PDF when you need a simple order sheet. Review surplus before buying more. Small checks can protect large crafting budgets.

Accuracy Tips

Treat the result as a planning estimate. Real prices can change quickly. Taxes, retainers, and server demand affect profit. Recheck expensive ingredients before purchases. For rare crafts, test one item first, then scale the batch after confirming margins.

Use this calculator for quick planning, workshop projects, market testing, or shared team material lists.

FAQs

What does this calculator estimate?

It estimates crafts needed, gross material needs, owned stock deductions, shopping quantities, shard costs, total cost, sale revenue, and possible profit.

Does it use live market board prices?

No. Enter current prices manually. This keeps the page simple and lets you use values from any world, data center, vendor, or inventory source.

How are crafts needed calculated?

The target output is divided by effective output per craft. The result is increased by the buffer percentage, then rounded up to a whole craft.

Can I include crystals and shards?

Yes. Use the crystal or shard fields for elemental costs. The calculator subtracts owned stock and adds only the buy quantity to total cost.

What is the buffer percentage?

Buffer adds extra crafts for safety. Use it when planning failures, rounding, rush orders, market changes, or extra workshop stock.

Why enter owned stock?

Owned stock reduces the purchase list. This helps you avoid buying materials already stored in retainers, inventories, or company chests.

Can I download the report?

Yes. Use the CSV button for spreadsheet work. After calculating, use the PDF button to create a simple report for saving or printing.

Is this limited to one recipe?

The form plans one recipe at a time. For multiple recipes, calculate each recipe separately, then combine the downloaded CSV files in a spreadsheet.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.