Calculator Inputs
Example Data Table
Use this sample setup to test a furnishing craft with market and station costs.
| Item | Target Qty | Material | Qty Per Craft | Unit Cost | Owned Qty |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iron Storage Chest | 10 | Iron Ingot | 12 | 0.80 | 20 |
| Iron Storage Chest | 10 | Timber | 8 | 0.45 | 10 |
| Iron Storage Chest | 10 | Weak Solvent | 3 | 0.25 | 0 |
Formula Used
The calculator first adjusts the base output by yield bonuses and waste rate.
Effective Yield = Base Output × (1 + Yield Bonus ÷ 100) × (1 − Waste Rate ÷ 100)
Crafts Needed = Ceiling(Target Quantity ÷ Effective Yield)
Material Required = Quantity Per Craft × Crafts Needed
Buy Quantity = Required Quantity − Owned Quantity
Material Cost = Buy Quantity × Unit Cost
Net Cost = Material Cost + Craft Fees − Salvage Credit
Net Revenue = Output × Sell Price − Market Deductions
Profit = Net Revenue − Net Cost
ROI = Profit ÷ Net Cost × 100
How To Use This Calculator
- Enter the item name and choose the related trade skill.
- Add your target quantity and normal output per craft.
- Enter yield bonuses, waste rate, and experience details.
- Add station fees, refining fees, tax, and listing fee.
- Enter every material using the required line format.
- Press the calculate button to view totals above the form.
- Download the result as a CSV file or PDF report.
New World Crafting Cost Planning
Why Crafting Costs Matter
Crafting in New World can look simple at first. A recipe may only show a few materials. The real cost is often deeper. You may need refined resources, station fees, taxes, and market deductions. This calculator helps you place every cost in one view. It is useful when you want to craft for leveling, personal use, or trading post profit.
Better Material Control
Material prices can change often. A profitable craft can become weak when one ingredient rises in price. Owned materials also change the result. The calculator separates required quantity, owned quantity, and buy quantity. This gives a cleaner view of real spending. It also helps you decide if farming a resource is better than buying it.
Profit And Experience Checks
Some players craft for coin. Others craft to gain trade skill experience. This tool supports both goals. It estimates profit, return on investment, break even sale price, total experience, cost per item, and cost per experience point. These values make different recipes easier to compare.
Advanced Planning Options
Yield bonuses can reduce the number of crafts needed. Waste rate can represent mistakes, failed planning, or expected loss. Salvage credit can estimate recovered value. Market tax and listing fee show how much coin is lost after selling. These extra fields make the calculator suitable for advanced crafting plans and market testing.
Using The Export Reports
After calculation, you can save a CSV file for spreadsheet work. You can also create a PDF report for quick records. This is helpful when comparing many recipes. Keep old results and update them when prices move. A small change in one material can change the full plan.
FAQs
1. What does this crafting calculator do?
It estimates crafts needed, material cost, fees, revenue, profit, ROI, break even price, and experience for New World crafting plans.
2. How should I enter material data?
Enter one material per line using this format: material name, quantity per craft, unit cost, and owned quantity, separated by vertical bars.
3. What is effective yield?
Effective yield is the adjusted output per craft after yield bonus and waste rate. It helps estimate the actual number of crafts needed.
4. What does salvage credit mean?
Salvage credit estimates recovered value from unused, returned, or salvaged materials. It reduces the final net crafting cost.
5. Can I use this for leveling trade skills?
Yes. Enter XP per craft and any XP bonus. The result shows total experience and cost per experience point.
6. Why is break even price important?
Break even price shows the minimum sale price needed to cover crafting cost after market deductions. It helps avoid losing coin.
7. Does owned material reduce the cost?
Yes. Owned quantity is subtracted from required quantity. Only the remaining buy quantity is multiplied by unit cost.
8. Can I export the calculator results?
Yes. After submitting the form, use the CSV button for spreadsheet data or the PDF button for a simple report.