Business

Markup vs Margin

Understand the difference between markup and margin so pricing decisions support the profit target you actually want.

6 min read

Reviewed April 10, 2026

Written by

WealthCalcLab Research Desk

Calculator methodology and consumer finance research

Reviewed by

WealthCalcLab Editorial Review

Content review for accuracy, clarity, and search intent coverage

Published

April 10, 2026

Original article date

Last updated

April 10, 2026

Content and calculator alignment check

What markup and margin are optimizing

Markup is the percentage added on top of cost, while margin measures how much of the final selling price remains as profit before other overhead is considered.

Markup is useful when pricing starts from cost-plus logic and the business needs a quick way to add a defined uplift.

Margin is more useful when the business is judging profitability against the final selling price and wants to know what share of revenue remains.

Where the trade-off really shows up

Do not swap the two formulas casually. The same percentage expressed as markup does not produce the same result as the same percentage expressed as margin.

Businesses often set a price using a markup target and then wonder why the resulting margin is lower than expected.

The summary cards usually show the headline answer, but the chart and table often reveal why two options that look close on paper lead to very different paths over time.

How to compare the numbers honestly

Start with the metric that best reflects the decision you actually care about, then test the second-order effects rather than treating the first card as the whole story.

Do not swap the two formulas casually. The same percentage expressed as markup does not produce the same result as the same percentage expressed as margin.

Pricing becomes more reliable once the business is clear about whether it is targeting a markup rule or a margin outcome.

When each option tends to win

Markup is useful when pricing starts from cost-plus logic and the business needs a quick way to add a defined uplift.

Margin is more useful when the business is judging profitability against the final selling price and wants to know what share of revenue remains.

Pricing becomes more reliable once the business is clear about whether it is targeting a markup rule or a margin outcome.

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