Markup vs Margin: Understanding the Difference
Markup and margin are often confused. Markup is added to cost; margin is percentage of selling price. A 25% markup = 20% margin.
Calculate material markup, costs, and profit margins for lumber, hardware, and supplies with cost plus pricing and margin analysis.
Add materials and business parameters to calculate optimal markup percentages and pricing strategies.
Markup and margin are often confused. Markup is added to cost; margin is percentage of selling price. A 25% markup = 20% margin.
Selling Price = Cost x (1 + Markup%); Margin = Profit / Selling Price | Material Category | Craftsperson | Shop | Contractor | Retailer |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hardwood Lumber | 25-35% | 30-40% | 20-30% | 40-60% |
| Softwood Lumber | 20-30% | 25-35% | 15-25% | 35-50% |
| Plywood/Sheet | 20-30% | 25-35% | 15-25% | 35-50% |
| Hardware/Fasteners | 30-50% | 40-60% | 25-40% | 50-100% |
| Finishes/Adhesives | 25-40% | 35-50% | 20-35% | 40-70% |
| Specialty Materials | 30-50% | 40-60% | 25-45% | 50-80% |
Percentage added to cost to set selling price. Cost + Markup = Selling Price. A 25% markup on $100 cost = $125 selling price.
Profit as percentage of selling price. Profit / Selling Price = Margin. $25 profit on $125 selling price = 20% margin.
Pricing method adding fixed percentage to material cost. Simple but may not reflect market value or competitive positioning.
Expenses for receiving, storing, and managing inventory. Includes labor, space, and damage risk. Typically 5-10% of material cost.
Percentage added for price volatility, damage, waste, and returns. Higher for specialty materials (5-10%), lower for standard (2-5%).
Lumber markup ranges: Craftsperson 25-35%, Small shop 30-40%, Retailer 40-60%. Consider handling costs, storage, and market positioning.
Handling: 5-10% (receiving, inspection, handling labor). Storage: 3-8% (space, climate control, inventory management). Include in base cost before markup.
Yes. High-value items: lower markup%. Bulk materials: higher markup%. Specialty items: premium markup. Adjust for handling and storage difficulty.
Volume discounts from suppliers can be passed to customers or retained. Consider tiered pricing: small qty (full markup), medium (partial discount), large (competitive).
Quarterly or when major changes occur: supplier prices, market conditions, competition. Track actual vs. projected margins and adjust.
Markup: percentage added to cost. Margin: profit as percentage of selling price. 25% markup = 20% margin. Use markup for pricing, margin for profitability analysis.