SSmallBizCalc

Break-even guide

How many orders do you need to break even?

Break-even volume tells you how many orders, jobs, appointments, or products are needed before the business covers fixed costs. It depends on monthly overhead and the contribution profit from each order after variable costs and revenue-based fees.

This number is useful because it turns pricing into capacity math. If your break-even point is higher than the number of orders you can realistically sell or deliver, the price, costs, scope, or fixed overhead need attention.

Break-Even Formula

The basic formula is: break-even orders = fixed overhead / contribution profit per order. Contribution profit is what remains from each order after variable costs and payment fees.

Input Formula or meaning Why it matters
Fixed overhead Monthly rent, software, insurance, admin, utilities, tools The amount the business must cover before profit
Variable cost Materials, labor, supplies, delivery, job-specific costs Costs that rise with each order
Payment fees Price x card, platform, booking, or processing fee rate Fees reduce contribution profit on every sale
Contribution profit Price after fees - variable cost The amount available to cover overhead and profit

Example

If each order sells for $100, has $55 in variable cost, and carries a 5% payment fee, contribution profit is $40: $100 - $5 in fees - $55 in variable cost. If monthly overhead is $1,200, the break-even point is 30 orders.

Everything after the 30th order starts contributing to monthly profit. If the price rises to $110 with the same variable cost and fee rate, contribution profit becomes $49.50 and break-even volume drops to about 25 orders. That only helps if customers still buy enough volume.

A higher price can lower break-even volume, but only if customers still buy. Test price, volume, and offer scope together.

Find break-even orders

Quick FAQ

Is break-even the same as target profit?

No. Break-even means fixed costs are covered. Target profit starts after break-even unless profit is built directly into the price.

What if break-even volume is unrealistic?

Review the price, reduce variable cost, reduce fixed overhead, narrow the offer, or build a higher-value package. Do not ignore the number; it is a capacity warning.

Can payment fees change break-even volume?

Yes. Fees reduce contribution profit on every order, so they increase the number of orders needed to cover fixed overhead.