Break-Even Revenue Calculator

Reviewed by: Dr. Lisa P. Morgan, Ph.D. in Management Accounting
Dr. Morgan is a management accounting specialist, ensuring the correct modeling of cost-volume-profit analysis and break-even point calculations.

The **Break-Even Revenue Calculator** is a crucial Cost-Volume-Profit (CVP) analysis tool that tells you exactly how much revenue your business needs to generate to cover all its costs and/or reach a specific profit goal. This versatile four-function solver allows you to determine the **Required Revenue (R)**, the **Total Fixed Costs (F)**, the **Contribution Margin Ratio (M)**, or the **Target Profit (T)**. Simply enter any three of the four required variables and the tool will solve for the missing one.

Break-Even Revenue Solver

Break-Even Revenue Formulas

The calculation is based on the Cost-Volume-Profit (CVP) equation, which models the relationship between costs, sales volume, and profit.

Core Relationship: Target Revenue = (Fixed Costs + Target Profit) / Contribution Margin Ratio

$$ R = \frac{F + T}{M} $$ \text{Where M is in decimal form (M\% / 100)}
\text{Solve for Fixed Costs (F): } $$ F = (R \cdot M) - T $$ \text{Solve for Target Profit (T): } $$ T = (R \cdot M) - F $$ \text{Solve for Ratio (M): } $$ M = \frac{F + T}{R} $$

Formula Source: Investopedia: CVP Analysis

Variables

  • F (Fixed Costs): Total costs that do not change with sales volume (e.g., rent, core salaries). (In currency).
  • M (Contribution Margin Ratio, %): The percentage of each revenue dollar that contributes to covering fixed costs and generating profit. (In percentage).
  • T (Target Profit): The specific net income goal the company aims to achieve (set to 0 for the basic break-even point). (In currency).
  • R (Required Revenue): The total sales revenue needed to achieve the target profit or break even. (In currency).

Related Cost & Profit Calculators

Deepen your CVP analysis with these related tools:

What is Break-Even Revenue?

Break-Even Revenue is the total sales amount at which a business’s total revenues exactly equal its total expenses (Fixed Costs + Variable Costs), resulting in zero profit ($T=0$). It is the point where the business is neither gaining nor losing money. This calculation is vital for pricing decisions, sales forecasting, and overall strategic planning.

The calculation hinges on the **Contribution Margin Ratio (M)**, which is the unit contribution margin divided by the unit selling price. By converting the analysis from unit volume to revenue dollars, the Break-Even Revenue calculation becomes applicable to businesses that sell multiple products at different price points, as the overall blended margin ratio can be used. Furthermore, setting a Target Profit ($T$) above zero turns the tool into a **Target Revenue Calculator**, helping the company set ambitious but achievable sales goals.

How to Calculate Break-Even Revenue (Example)

A service company has Fixed Costs (F) of $\$100,000$ and a Contribution Margin Ratio (M) of $25\%$. We will solve for the revenue needed to achieve a Target Profit (T) of $\$25,000$.

  1. Step 1: Convert Ratio to Decimal

    Contribution Margin Ratio ($M$) $= 25\% = 0.25$.

  2. Step 2: Calculate the Required Revenue Numerator ($F + T$)

    $$ F + T = \$100,000 + \$25,000 = \$125,000 $$

  3. Step 3: Apply the Target Revenue Formula

    $$ R = \frac{F + T}{M} = \frac{\$125,000}{0.25} $$

    The company must generate Revenue of $\mathbf{\$500,000}$ to achieve a profit of $\$25,000$.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

What is the Contribution Margin Ratio (M)?

The Contribution Margin Ratio (M) is the percentage of every sales dollar that goes toward covering fixed costs and profit. It is calculated as (Revenue – Variable Costs) / Revenue. A higher ratio means less revenue is required to break even.

Can the Margin Ratio (M) be negative?

No. If $M$ is negative, it means the sales price is less than the variable cost of the goods/service, so the company loses money on every sale. This makes the break-even point mathematically impossible, and the calculator will flag this as an error.

Why must Fixed Costs (F) be positive?

Fixed Costs (F) must be positive because they represent the necessary overhead (rent, salaries, etc.). If $F$ were zero, the break-even point would immediately be met with any positive margin ratio, which is not a realistic scenario for a functioning business.

What is the Margin of Safety?

The Margin of Safety is the amount by which actual (or budgeted) sales exceed the Break-Even Revenue. It represents the cushion the company has before it starts incurring a loss. It can be calculated as $(\text{Actual Sales} – \text{Break-Even Sales}) / \text{Actual Sales}$.

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