AbraCalc

Manufacturing Gross Margin — High COGS Business

A manufacturer with $500,000 in revenue and $400,000 in production costs has a 20% gross margin — typical for capital-intensive manufacturing.

Embed this tool on your site

How to use this tool

  1. Enter total revenue and cost of goods sold (cogs) in the fields above.
  2. Results update instantly as you type — or click Calculate.
  3. Read your gross profit margin and the full breakdown beneath it.

Manufacturing businesses typically run at 15–35% gross margin due to high material and labor costs — calculate yours to benchmark against your sector.

Frequently asked questions

What is gross profit margin?
Gross profit margin = (Revenue − COGS) ÷ Revenue × 100. It measures how efficiently a company produces goods or services. High gross margins (e.g., software at 70–90%) mean more money available for R&D, sales, and profit.
What costs go in COGS?
COGS includes direct materials, direct labour, and manufacturing overhead tied to production. It excludes selling, general & administrative (SG&A) expenses, R&D, and interest — those appear below the gross margin line.
What is a good gross margin?
Software/SaaS: 70–90%. Retail: 25–50%. Manufacturing: 20–40%. Service businesses: 50–70%. Compare against industry peers rather than a universal benchmark.