The break-even point is the level of sales at which your total revenue equals your total costs — you're making neither a profit nor a loss. Understanding your break-even is essential for pricing decisions, investment appraisals, and business planning.

The Break-Even Formula

There are two versions: units sold and revenue.

Break-Even in Units

Break-even units = Fixed costs / (Selling price − Variable cost per unit)

The denominator (selling price − variable cost) is called the contribution margin per unit — the profit each unit contributes before covering fixed costs.

Break-Even in Revenue

Break-even revenue = Fixed costs / Contribution margin ratio

Where:

Contribution margin ratio = (Selling price − Variable cost) / Selling price

Key Definitions

Fixed costs: Costs that don't change with output — rent, salaries, insurance, software subscriptions, loan repayments.

Variable costs: Costs that change directly with output — raw materials, packaging, sales commission, transaction fees.

Selling price: What you charge per unit.

Contribution margin: What each sale contributes to covering fixed costs, then to profit.

Worked Example: Product Business

Scenario: You make handmade candles.

Amount
Selling price per candle£15
Variable cost per candle (wax, wick, jar, packaging)£5
Monthly fixed costs (rent, equipment, insurance)£2,000

Contribution margin per unit:

£15 − £5 = £10 per candle

Break-even in units:

Break-even = £2,000 / £10 = 200 candles/month

Break-even in revenue:

Contribution margin ratio = £10 / £15 = 66.7%
Break-even revenue = £2,000 / 0.667 = £3,000/month

You need to sell 200 candles (£3,000 of revenue) per month to break even.

Worked Example: Service Business

Scenario: You run a freelance design studio.

Amount
Average project fee£1,200
Variable costs per project (software, assets)£120
Monthly fixed costs (salary, tools, rent)£4,500

Contribution margin:

£1,200 − £120 = £1,080 per project

Break-even projects:

Break-even = £4,500 / £1,080 = 4.17 projects/month

Round up to 5 projects/month to ensure profitability.

Break-Even Chart

A break-even chart plots:

  • Total revenue line: Starts at 0, slopes upward
  • Total cost line: Starts at fixed costs (y-axis), slopes upward less steeply than revenue
  • Break-even point: Where the two lines cross

Above the break-even point = profit. Below = loss.

Margin of Safety

The margin of safety shows how far sales can fall before you make a loss:

Margin of safety (units) = Actual sales − Break-even sales
Margin of safety (%) = (Actual − Break-even) / Actual × 100

Example: If you're selling 300 candles/month and break-even is 200:

Margin of safety = 300 − 200 = 100 candles
Margin of safety % = 100 / 300 × 100 = 33%

Sales could drop 33% before you'd start losing money.

Using Break-Even for Pricing Decisions

Scenario: Should you offer a 20% discount?

New selling price: £15 × 0.8 = £12. New contribution: £12 − £5 = £7.

New break-even: £2,000 / £7 = 286 candles/month.

You'd need to sell 43% more candles (286 vs 200) just to break even. Is that realistic? If not, the discount isn't worthwhile.

Break-Even for SaaS and Subscription Businesses

For subscription businesses, use monthly recurring revenue (MRR):

Months to break even = Total setup cost / (MRR − Monthly variable costs)

Example: You spent £50,000 building a SaaS tool. Each subscriber pays £29/month; your variable cost (hosting, support) is £3/subscriber.

If you have 100 subscribers:

Monthly contribution = 100 × (£29 − £3) = £2,600
Months to break even = £50,000 / £2,600 = 19.2 months

Limitations of Break-Even Analysis

Assumes linear relationships — in reality, variable costs per unit often decrease with volume (bulk buying) and prices may need to drop to increase volume.

Ignores time — selling 200 candles in December is different from selling 200 in July.

Fixed costs aren't truly fixed — at high enough volumes, you'll need more staff, larger premises, etc.

Use break-even as one planning tool, not the only one.


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