Calculator inputs
Use detailed ecommerce assumptions to model fees, returns, advertising, tax, order size, traffic needs, and target profit thresholds.
Example data table
This sample table shows how different selling prices and cost structures change break even volume for ecommerce products.
| Scenario | Fixed Costs | Price / Unit | Variable Cost / Unit | Contribution / Unit | Break Even Units |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starter store | $2,400 | $38.00 | $25.20 | $12.80 | 188 |
| Marketplace heavy fees | $5,000 | $60.00 | $41.17 | $18.83 | 266 |
| Premium bundle offer | $7,800 | $95.00 | $54.40 | $40.60 | 193 |
Formula used
| Fee cost per unit | Selling Price × (Payment Fee % + Marketplace Fee %) ÷ 100 |
|---|---|
| Return reserve per unit | Return Rate % × Return Cost per Return ÷ 100 |
| Variable cost per unit | COGS + Packaging + Shipping Subsidy + Ad Cost + Variable Overhead + Tax + Fee Cost + Return Reserve |
| Unit contribution | Selling Price − Variable Cost per Unit |
| Break even units | Fixed Costs ÷ Unit Contribution |
| Break even revenue | Rounded Break Even Units × Selling Price |
| Target profit units | (Fixed Costs + Target Profit) ÷ Unit Contribution |
| Projected profit | (Projected Units × Unit Contribution) − Fixed Costs |
| Required sessions | Break Even Orders ÷ Conversion Rate |
When unit contribution is zero or negative, the business cannot break even under the current assumptions. A price increase, lower fee burden, lower returns cost, or lower variable cost is required.
How to use this calculator
- Enter total fixed costs for the period you want to analyze, usually monthly.
- Fill in selling price and all meaningful unit costs, including packaging, shipping subsidy, and ad spend.
- Add percentage fees for processors and marketplaces to reflect channel economics realistically.
- Estimate return rate and return handling cost to include the hidden impact of reversals.
- Use units per order and conversion rate if you want order and traffic targets.
- Set a target profit to see how many units are needed beyond simple break even.
- Enter projected units to compare your expected sales volume with the break even threshold.
- Submit the form, review the result section above, then export the summary as CSV or PDF.
Frequently asked questions
1) What does break even units mean in ecommerce?
Break even units show how many units you must sell so total contribution covers fixed costs exactly. At that point, operating profit is zero. Selling more units should generate profit if contribution per unit stays positive.
2) Why can break even units become unexpectedly high?
Break even volume rises when contribution per unit shrinks. Heavy fees, expensive returns, weak pricing, high ad costs, and shipping subsidies all reduce contribution, so more unit sales are needed to recover fixed overhead.
3) Should marketplace and payment fees be included?
Yes. They directly reduce the money kept from each sale. Ignoring them usually understates break even units and makes a product look more profitable than it really is in a live ecommerce channel.
4) How are returns handled in this calculator?
Returns are modeled as an expected reserve per sold unit. The tool multiplies return rate by cost per return, then spreads that cost across unit sales so break even analysis includes reverse logistics exposure.
5) What if my contribution per unit is zero or negative?
A valid break even point does not exist. Every sale fails to cover variable cost, so selling more units does not solve the problem. You need better pricing, lower costs, or both.
6) Why estimate sessions needed?
Traffic targets help connect financial goals with marketing planning. Once break even orders are known, conversion rate can convert that order goal into an approximate session requirement for campaigns or storefront forecasting.
7) Can I use target profit instead of break even only?
Yes. Target profit units extend the same logic by adding a desired profit amount on top of fixed costs. This is useful for budgeting, launch planning, and setting realistic sales quotas.
8) Is this calculator useful for bundle offers or subscriptions?
Yes, as long as inputs reflect the economics of the offer. Use average realized selling price, blended variable cost, return assumptions, and average units per order for the bundle or subscription period.