Gross profit is the amount remaining after deducting the cost of sales (also called cost of goods sold) from turnover . It measures how much a business earns from its core trading activity before administrative expenses, distribution costs, and other overheads are taken into account.

On a UK income statement , gross profit appears immediately after cost of sales:

Income Statement Line£
Turnover600,000
Cost of sales(240,000)
Gross profit360,000

The Companies Act 2006 formats for the profit and loss account require gross profit to be shown as a distinct subtotal when the company uses the detailed (Format 1) presentation.

How to Calculate Gross Profit

The formula is straightforward:

Gross Profit = Turnover - Cost of Sales

What Is Included in Cost of Sales?

Cost of sales comprises the direct costs attributable to the goods or services that generated the turnover during the period:

Included in Cost of SalesNot Included in Cost of Sales
Raw materials consumedOffice rent
Direct labour (production wages)Marketing costs
Factory overheads (rent, utilities, depreciation of production equipment)Administrative salaries
Freight inwardsInterest payable
Packaging materialsSelling and distribution costs
Opening stock plus purchases minus closing stockDepreciation of non-production assets

Getting the split right matters because it directly affects the gross profit figure and the gross profit margin, which is a key performance indicator for any trading business.

Gross Profit for Different Business Types

Product-Based Businesses

For a retailer or manufacturer, cost of sales is driven by the cost of inventory. The calculation follows the standard stock formula:

Cost of Sales = Opening Stock + Purchases - Closing Stock

Example: A wholesaler has opening stock of £40,000, purchases of £180,000, and closing stock of £35,000:

Item£
Opening stock40,000
Purchases180,000
Less: closing stock(35,000)
Cost of sales185,000

If turnover is £320,000, gross profit is £135,000.

Service-Based Businesses

For service businesses, cost of sales typically includes direct labour and any direct materials used in delivering the service. A consulting firm’s cost of sales might include consultant salaries and travel costs directly attributable to client engagements.

Gross Profit Margin

The gross profit margin expresses gross profit as a percentage of turnover:

Gross Profit Margin = (Gross Profit / Turnover) x 100

ScenarioTurnover (£)Gross Profit (£)Margin
Retailer500,000150,00030%
Software company500,000400,00080%
Manufacturer500,000200,00040%

Margins vary significantly by industry. Comparing a company’s margin against sector averages is one of the most useful analyses covered in financial ratios .

What Affects Gross Profit Margin?

Several factors can cause the margin to rise or fall:

  • Pricing changes – raising or lowering selling prices directly affects turnover without changing cost of sales
  • Supplier costs – increases in raw material or purchase prices raise cost of sales
  • Product mix – selling a higher proportion of high-margin products improves the overall margin
  • Stock wastage and shrinkage – lost or damaged stock increases cost of sales
  • Production efficiency – reducing waste and improving processes lowers direct costs
  • Volume discounts – bulk purchasing can reduce per-unit cost of sales

Gross Profit on the Income Statement

Gross profit feeds directly into the rest of the income statement :

Line£
Turnover600,000
Cost of sales(240,000)
Gross profit360,000
Administrative expenses(180,000)
Distribution costs(60,000)
Operating profit120,000
Interest payable(8,000)
Profit before tax112,000
Corporation tax(28,000)
Net profit84,000

The gap between gross profit and net profit reflects the burden of overheads, finance costs, and taxation. A business with a healthy gross margin but poor net margin needs to examine its overhead structure.

Gross Profit and FRS 102

Under FRS 102 (Section 5), the income statement must present turnover, cost of sales, and gross profit as separate line items. The standard does not prescribe the exact format but requires sufficient detail for the financial statements to give a true and fair view.

Companies filing under the Companies Act 2006 formats must follow either:

  • Format 1 (vertical, analysed by function) – shows cost of sales and gross profit explicitly
  • Format 2 (vertical, analysed by nature) – shows expenses by type (materials, staff costs, depreciation) rather than splitting between cost of sales and overheads

Most UK companies use Format 1, which makes gross profit clearly visible.

Gross Profit and the Balance Sheet

Although gross profit is an income statement figure, it has a direct connection to the balance sheet :

  • Stock valuation affects cost of sales and therefore gross profit. Overstating closing stock understates cost of sales and overstates gross profit.
  • Accruals for direct costs ensure cost of sales is complete. Failing to accrue for goods received but not yet invoiced will understate cost of sales and overstate gross profit.
  • Retained earnings on the balance sheet accumulate the profits flowing from gross profit through the income statement.

Gross Profit and Corporation Tax

Gross profit is not a separate tax concept, but it forms the starting point of the tax computation. HMRC expects the gross profit margin to be consistent with industry norms. A margin significantly below the sector average may trigger an enquiry, particularly if:

  • The business is reporting persistent losses
  • The margin has changed significantly without a clear commercial reason
  • Stock movements appear inconsistent with reported purchases and sales

Using Gross Profit for Business Decisions

Pricing Decisions

Knowing the gross margin on each product or service line helps directors set prices that cover both direct costs and a fair share of overheads:

Minimum selling price = Cost of sales per unit / (1 - Target gross margin)

If a product costs £30 to produce and the target margin is 40%:

Minimum price = £30 / (1 - 0.40) = £50

Break-Even Analysis

Gross profit contributes to covering fixed costs . The break-even point can be expressed in terms of gross profit:

Break-Even Turnover = Fixed Costs / Gross Profit Margin

If fixed costs are £200,000 and the gross margin is 40%, the business needs £500,000 of turnover to break even.

Product Line Analysis

Comparing gross margins across product lines helps management decide where to focus resources:

Product LineTurnover (£)Gross Profit (£)Margin
Product A200,000100,00050%
Product B300,00090,00030%
Product C100,00015,00015%

Product C may need a price increase, cost reduction, or discontinuation.

Common Errors in Gross Profit Reporting

ErrorEffect on Gross Profit
Including overhead costs in cost of salesUnderstates gross profit
Failing to accrue for goods received not invoicedOverstates gross profit
Incorrect stock count (overstated)Overstates gross profit
Incorrect stock count (understated)Understates gross profit
Classifying capital expenditure as cost of salesUnderstates gross profit
Omitting freight inwards from cost of salesOverstates gross profit

Regular reconciliation of stock and cost of sales, as part of the trial balance review, helps prevent these errors.

Gross Profit Versus Net Profit

FeatureGross ProfitNet Profit
DeductsCost of sales onlyAll expenses including overheads, interest, tax
MeasuresTrading performanceOverall profitability
Margin benchmarkVaries by industry (20-80%)Typically 5-20%
Influenced byPricing, purchasing, productionAll of the above plus overheads, financing, tax
Useful forProduct-level analysis, pricingOverall business performance

Both figures are essential. Gross profit shows whether the core trading model is sound. Net profit shows whether the business as a whole is profitable after all costs are met.