Mark-up
Mark-up is the amount added to a product's cost to arrive at its selling price, expressed as a percentage of cost. It differs from margin: a 25% mark-up on a €80 cost gives a €100 price and a 20% margin.
FrameworkPricing
See it move
A product costing €80 is priced with a 25% mark-up, giving a selling price of €80 × 1.25 = €100 and a profit of €20. That same €20 is a 25% mark-up measured against the €80 cost, but only a 20% margin measured against the €100 price. Confusing the two overstates profitability whenever a mark-up percentage is mistaken for a margin.
The formula
Variables
- selling price (€)
- full cost of the product (direct costs plus allocated overhead) (€)
- mark-up expressed as a decimal (e.g. 0.25 for a 25% mark-up) (decimal)
Mark-up is applied to cost, not to selling price. A 25% mark-up on a €80 cost gives a selling price of €100 and a profit of €20.
Variables
- gross profit (selling price minus full cost) (€)
- full cost of the product (€)
Variables
- gross profit margin expressed as a decimal (gross profit ÷ selling price) (decimal)
- mark-up expressed as a decimal (gross profit ÷ cost) (decimal)
A 25% mark-up (m = 0.25) corresponds to a 20% margin: 0.25 ÷ 1.25 = 0.20. Confusing the two overstates profitability when a mark-up percentage is mistakenly treated as a margin.
Check yourself
A wholesaler prices all products with a 40% mark-up on cost. A product line costs €175 per unit. A new finance director claims the firm therefore earns a 40% profit margin on this line. Is the director correct, and what is the actual gross margin?