The amount remaining from sales revenue after deducting variable costs, available to cover fixed costs and generate profit.
Contribution Margin represents how much each unit or each rupee of sales 'contributes' toward covering fixed costs and profit. It's the foundation of Cost-Volume-Profit (CVP) analysis and break-even calculation. A higher contribution margin means each sale covers more fixed costs. Products with low contribution margins need high volumes to be profitable. Businesses use this metric for pricing decisions, product mix optimization, make-or-buy decisions, and determining minimum order quantities.
A bakery sells cakes at ₹500 each. Variable costs: Ingredients ₹150, Packaging ₹30, Direct labor ₹70 = ₹250 total. Contribution Margin per cake = ₹500 – ₹250 = ₹250 (50% CM ratio). Monthly fixed costs: Rent ₹50,000, Salaries ₹1,00,000 = ₹1,50,000. Break-even: ₹1,50,000 ÷ ₹250 = 600 cakes/month.
glossaryTermPage.reasons.accuracy
glossaryTermPage.reasons.compliance
glossaryTermPage.reasons.decisions
glossaryTermPage.reasons.efficiency
It varies by industry: Software/SaaS: 70–90%, Professional services: 50–70%, Manufacturing: 25–45%, Retail: 20–40%, Restaurants: 60–70% (food), 80–90% (beverages). A higher ratio means more pricing power and fixed cost coverage per sale.
Contribution margin deducts only VARIABLE costs (materials, direct labor, sales commission). Gross profit deducts ALL production costs including fixed manufacturing overhead (factory rent, supervisor salary). Contribution margin is used for break-even analysis; gross profit for overall profitability.
The point at which a business's total revenue equals total costs, resulting in neither profit nor loss.
A financial analysis tool that examines the relationship between costs, sales volume, and profit to determine how changes in any of these affect profitability.
A costing method that assigns only variable costs to products and treats all fixed costs as period expenses charged to the profit & loss account.
The percentage of revenue that exceeds the cost of goods sold, showing how much of each rupee in sales is retained as gross profit.
glossaryTermPage.cta.subtitle