How to Use Basic Maths to Price Your Product and Actually Make a Profit

Businessman points at cost icons on screen, showing how basic maths shapes product pricing and profit

Pricing looks simple until money starts leaking out of every sale.

A lot of small business owners pick a number by copying competitors, doubling the cost, or guessing what sounds reasonable. That can work for a while, but it often leads to one ugly surprise: sales are coming in, yet profit is barely there.

Good pricing starts with basic maths, not instinct. The good news is that the maths is not advanced. You only need a few numbers, a calculator, and enough honesty to count every cost properly.

Start With the Number Most People Avoid

Person uses a calculator over financial charts to work out product cost per unit
Source: shutterstock.com, True profit starts with a full, accurate unit cost that includes every expense tied to each sale

Before setting a price, figure out what one unit really costs.

For a physical product, cost usually includes materials, packaging, labor tied directly to production, shipping into inventory, payment processing, marketplace fees, and any other expense that rises when you sell one more unit.

IRS guidance around cost of goods sold reflects the same idea broadly, tying product cost to inventory, purchases, labor, materials and supplies, and other production-related costs.

For a service, “unit cost” can mean labor time per job, software usage, travel, contractor help, and transaction fees.

A stronger grip on everyday calculations, sometimes built through platforms like Qui Si Risolve, can make cost tracking far more accurate.

Many businesses miss costs that feel small on their own:

  • labels and inserts
  • damaged stock
  • returns and replacements
  • ad spend needed to generate one sale
  • storage
  • subscription tools used to deliver the product

Miss a few items, and your price looks profitable only on paper.

Fixed Costs vs Variable Costs

Basic pricing gets much easier once you split costs into two buckets.

Variable costs rise with each sale.
Fixed costs stay in place whether you sell 5 units or 500.

The U.S. Small Business Administration defines fixed costs as expenses that do not change with production in a given period, and it lists examples such as rent, salaries, property taxes, insurance, interest, and depreciation.

SBA also notes that some costs are mixed, with both fixed and variable parts, so separating them makes break-even analysis more accurate.

A simple view looks like this:

Cost Type Examples
Variable cost per unit materials, packaging, unit labor, card fees, shipping per order
Fixed monthly cost rent, software subscriptions, insurance, salaries, and loan payments
Mixed cost utilities, phone plans, repairs, part fixed and part usage-based

Once you have that split, pricing stops being a guessing game.

Learn the 3 Formulas That Matter Most

Calculator, piggy bank, and coins on financial charts show budgeting and pricing calculations
Source: shutterstock.com, Profit clarity comes from three basic maths formulas: unit profit, break-even point, and gross margin

You do not need an MBA for product pricing. You need 3 formulas and the discipline to use them.

1. Unit Profit

Unit Profit = Selling Price – Variable Cost Per Unit

If you sell a candle for $24 and the variable cost is $9, the unit profit before fixed costs is $15.

That does not mean you “made” $15 in clean profit. Part of that $15 still has to cover rent, software, admin time, and other fixed expenses. Still, unit profit gives you the first useful signal: whether each sale is helping or hurting.

SBA refers to that gap between sale price and variable cost as contribution margin, which is the amount available to cover fixed expenses and, after that, profit.

2. Break-Even Point

Break-Even Units = Fixed Costs ÷ (Price – Variable Cost)

SBA gives the same formula for break-even in units.

Say your monthly fixed costs are $2,000.
Your product sells for $24.
Variable cost per unit is $9.

Break-even units = $2,000 ÷ ($24 – $9)
Break-even units = $2,000 ÷ $15
Break-even units = 133.3

So you need to sell 134 units a month before you move past covering costs.

That number matters because it turns pricing into something measurable. If your realistic sales volume is 70 units a month, then $24 is probably too low, the costs are too high, or the business model needs work.

3. Gross Margin

Gross Margin % = (Selling Price – Variable Cost) ÷ Selling Price × 100

Using the same example:

($24 – $9) ÷ $24 × 100 = 62.5%

Gross margin tells you how much of each sales dollar remains after direct product cost.

Penn State Extension notes that margin and markup are not the same thing. In one example, a $6.50 sale price and $5.00 unit cost produce a $1.50 gross profit margin and a 30% markup on cost.

That distinction matters a lot.

Markup and Margin Are Not the Same


A lot of pricing mistakes start right here.

If you buy or make something for $10 and add a 50% markup, the price becomes $15. But the margin is $5 divided by $15, which is 33.3%, not 50%.

Here is a quick comparison:

Unit Cost Markup Selling Price Gross Margin
$10 50% $15 33.3%
$10 100% $20 50%
$10 150% $25 60%

Many owners say they want a 50% margin, then accidentally apply a 50% markup. Big difference. Smaller bank balance.

Build a Price From the Ground Up

Price tag icons on blocks highlight one product among others on a blue background
Source: shutterstock.com, Accurate unit cost plus realistic sales volume shows why small price changes can make or break profit

A practical pricing process usually looks like this.

Step 1: Calculate True Variable Cost Per Unit

Say you sell handmade notebooks:

  • paper and cover materials: $6.20
  • packaging: $0.80
  • direct labor: $4.00
  • payment fee: $1.10
  • average outbound shipping subsidy: $1.40

Total variable cost = $13.50

Step 2: Add Monthly Fixed Costs

Let’s say the monthly fixed costs are:

  • studio rent: $700
  • software and tools: $120
  • insurance: $80
  • website and admin costs: $100

Total fixed costs = $1,000 per month

Step 3: Estimate Monthly Sales Volume

Let’s say the realistic monthly volume is 100 notebooks.

Fixed cost allocation per unit = $1,000 ÷ 100 = $10

Now your full per-unit cost at that sales level is:

$13.50 + $10 = $23.50

Price at $24, and you are basically working for almost nothing.

Price at $32, and math changes fast.

At $32:

  • variable cost = $13.50
  • contribution per unit = $18.50
  • total contribution at 100 units = $1,850
  • minus fixed costs of $1,000
  • monthly operating profit = $850

Same product, very different outcome.

Why Competitor Pricing Can Lead You Straight Into Trouble

Looking at competitors is useful, but copying them blindly is risky.

Their rent may be lower. Their supplier may be better. Their margins may already be weak. They may use a lower price as a short-term acquisition tactic.

Or they may have a bigger product mix, with one item priced low because another item carries the real profit.

A smarter move is to treat competitor pricing as market context, then test whether your own numbers support a similar range.

SBA guidance on forecasting also stresses tracking units and average price separately, because that helps you see whether results changed due to price or sales volume.

Price Has to Match Demand, Not Just Cost

Cost gives you a floor. Market demand helps shape the ceiling.

Harvard Business School’s Working Knowledge notes that price elasticity describes how much sales volume may fall after a price increase, and it frames pricing as a balance between margins and volume rather than a simple question of how high a business can push price.

In plain English, a higher price is not automatically better.

If a soap bar costs $4 to produce:

  • sell at $8 and maybe move 500 units
  • sell at $10 and maybe move 320 units
  • sell at $12 and maybe move 180 units

The highest price does not always create the highest profit. Sometimes a lower price with stronger volume wins.

A Simple Profit Test

Run 3 scenarios before choosing a final price.

Price Variable Cost Unit Contribution Expected Units Total Contribution
$8 $4 $4 500 $2,000
$10 $4 $6 320 $1,920
$12 $4 $8 180 $1,440

If fixed costs are $1,200, profit would be:

  • at $8: $800
  • at $10: $720
  • at $12: $240

Without running the maths, plenty of owners would assume $12 is the strongest. In that case, it is weakest.

Do Not Forget Profit Target Pricing

@ahormoziPricing is the single strongest lever on profit in a business

♬ original sound – Alex Hormozi

Break-even is survival. Profit target pricing is business building.

SBA notes that break-even analysis helps set revenue targets and make decisions based on facts rather than emotion.

If you want $3,000 monthly operating profit, use:

Required Units = (Fixed Costs + Target Profit) ÷ (Price – Variable Cost)

Using the notebook example:

Required units = ($1,000 + $3,000) ÷ ($32 – $13.50)
Required units = $4,000 ÷ $18.50
Required units = 216.2

So you need to sell 217 notebooks per month to hit that target.

Now, pricing becomes strategic. You can ask the right questions:

  • Can demand support 217 units at $32?
  • Would $34 lower volume only slightly?
  • Can variable cost drop by $1 with a better supplier?
  • Can bundles raise average order value?

That is what useful pricing math does. It gives you levers.

Review Pricing Regularly

Stacks of coins and a rising percentage chart show pricing changes over time
Source: shutterstock.com, Regular price review keeps profit aligned with real costs and market changes

A profitable price in January can turn weak by June.

Shipping changes. Supplier terms change. Ad costs change. Customer behavior changes.

Reviewing and revising forecasts need to be done often, because the point is not perfect prediction. The point is to use current numbers to manage better.

A simple review schedule helps:

Monthly

Check variable cost, average selling price, refunds, and profit per unit.

Quarterly

Review break-even point, competitor pricing, demand response, and margin by product.

After Any Major Change

Reprice after tariff shifts, supplier increases, packaging redesigns, or major ad cost swings.

Final Thought

Stacks of coins rise alongside a bar chart and upward arrow showing profit growth
Source: shutterstock.com, Clear pricing decisions come from numbers, not assumptions or branding instinct

Pricing gets easier once you stop treating it like a branding exercise and start treating it like applied maths.

Count every real cost. Separate fixed from variable. Calculate margin. Test break-even. Model a few price points before committing. Profit usually improves when pricing becomes more deliberate and less emotional.