What is Net Profit?
A guide to net profit in UK accounting, covering the calculation, its position on the income statement, net margin analysis, and reporting under FRS 102 and the Companies Act.
Net profit is the final profit figure on the income statement , representing the amount remaining after all costs have been deducted from turnover . These costs include cost of sales, administrative expenses, distribution costs, interest, and corporation tax. Net profit is sometimes called profit after tax, bottom line, or net income.
Net profit is the figure that gets transferred to retained earnings on the balance sheet and determines how much is available for distribution as dividends to shareholders.
How to Calculate Net Profit
Net Profit = Turnover - Cost of Sales - Operating Expenses - Interest - Tax
Or, starting from gross profit :
Net Profit = Gross Profit - Operating Expenses - Interest - Tax
Worked Example
| Income Statement Line | £ |
|---|---|
| Turnover | 800,000 |
| Cost of goods sold | (320,000) |
| Gross profit | 480,000 |
| Administrative expenses | (200,000) |
| Distribution costs | (80,000) |
| Operating profit | 200,000 |
| Interest payable | (12,000) |
| Profit before tax | 188,000 |
| Corporation tax (25%) | (47,000) |
| Net profit | 141,000 |
Levels of Profit on the Income Statement
The income statement presents several profit subtotals, each serving a different purpose:
| Profit Level | What It Deducts | What It Measures |
|---|---|---|
| Gross profit | Cost of sales | Trading performance |
| Operating profit | Overheads (admin, distribution) | Operational efficiency |
| Profit before tax | Interest and finance costs | Pre-tax profitability |
| Net profit | Corporation tax | Overall profitability |
Each level strips away another layer of costs, and the gaps between them reveal where money is being spent.
Net Profit Margin
The net profit margin expresses net profit as a percentage of turnover:
Net Profit Margin = (Net Profit / Turnover) x 100
| Company | Turnover (£) | Net Profit (£) | Net Margin |
|---|---|---|---|
| Company A | 1,000,000 | 150,000 | 15% |
| Company B | 1,000,000 | 50,000 | 5% |
| Company C | 500,000 | 100,000 | 20% |
Company C has the highest margin despite having the lowest turnover. Net margin is one of the core ratios examined in financial ratio analysis.
Typical Net Margins by Sector
| Sector | Typical UK Net Margin |
|---|---|
| Software and technology | 15-25% |
| Professional services | 10-20% |
| Manufacturing | 5-12% |
| Retail (general) | 2-6% |
| Construction | 3-8% |
| Hospitality | 3-10% |
These are broad ranges. Individual companies may fall outside them depending on scale, competitive position, and business model.
What Affects Net Profit?
Net profit is influenced by every cost and revenue line in the business:
Revenue Factors
- Sales volume – more units sold increases turnover
- Pricing – higher prices improve margin per unit
- Product mix – shifting toward higher-margin products improves overall profitability
- Revenue recognition timing under FRS 102
Cost Factors
- Cost of sales – raw materials, direct labour, production costs
- Overheads – rent, utilities, salaries, insurance
- Depreciation and amortisation of fixed assets
- Finance costs – interest on loans and overdrafts
- Bad debts – irrecoverable accounts receivable
Tax Factors
- Corporation tax rates – the main rate is 25% for profits above £250,000; the small profits rate is 19% for profits up to £50,000, with marginal relief between the two thresholds
- Tax reliefs – R&D tax credits, capital allowances, and annual investment allowance reduce the tax charge
- Timing differences – deferred tax arises from differences between accounting profit and taxable profit
Net Profit and the Balance Sheet
Net profit flows directly into the balance sheet through equity :
| Account | Debit (£) | Credit (£) |
|---|---|---|
| Profit and loss account | 141,000 | |
| Retained earnings | 141,000 |
If dividends of £40,000 are declared:
| Account | Debit (£) | Credit (£) |
|---|---|---|
| Retained earnings | 40,000 | |
| Dividends payable | 40,000 |
The remaining £101,000 stays in retained earnings, increasing the company’s net asset position. Over time, accumulated net profits build the equity base that supports growth and borrowing capacity.
Net Profit and Corporation Tax
For UK corporation tax purposes, the starting point is the accounting profit before tax. HMRC then makes adjustments for items treated differently under tax law:
| Adjustment | Effect |
|---|---|
| Depreciation (add back) | Increases taxable profit |
| Capital allowances (deduct) | Reduces taxable profit |
| Entertaining costs (add back) | Increases taxable profit |
| R&D enhanced deduction (deduct) | Reduces taxable profit |
| Disallowed provisions (add back) | Increases taxable profit |
The resulting taxable profit is charged at the relevant corporation tax rate, and the tax charge reduces accounting profit to arrive at net profit.
Net Profit Versus Gross Profit
| Feature | Gross Profit | Net Profit |
|---|---|---|
| Deducts | Cost of sales only | All costs |
| Shows | Trading viability | Overall profitability |
| Margin range | 20-80% | 2-25% |
| Use | Pricing, product decisions | Dividend capacity, valuation |
A company can have a strong gross margin but weak net profit if overheads are too high. Conversely, a company with a modest gross margin can achieve healthy net profit through tight cost control.
Net Profit and Business Valuation
Net profit is a common basis for valuing private companies. Two widely used methods:
Price-to-Earnings Multiple
Business Value = Net Profit x P/E Multiple
For small UK companies, P/E multiples typically range from 4 to 10, depending on the sector, growth prospects, and risk profile.
| Net Profit (£) | P/E Multiple | Implied Value (£) |
|---|---|---|
| 100,000 | 5 | 500,000 |
| 100,000 | 8 | 800,000 |
| 250,000 | 6 | 1,500,000 |
Adjusted Net Profit
For owner-managed businesses, the reported net profit is often adjusted to reflect a market-rate salary for the owner, remove one-off items, and normalise discretionary spending. This adjusted net profit gives a more reliable basis for valuation.
Improving Net Profit
Increase Revenue
- Raise prices where the market allows
- Expand into new customer segments or geographies
- Introduce higher-margin products or services
Reduce Cost of Sales
- Negotiate better supplier terms
- Reduce waste and improve production efficiency
- Optimise stock levels to reduce storage and obsolescence costs
Control Overheads
- Review staffing levels and productivity
- Renegotiate rent, insurance, and utility contracts
- Automate administrative processes to reduce manual effort
Manage Finance Costs
- Refinance expensive debt at lower rates
- Reduce reliance on overdraft facilities
- Improve cash collection to reduce borrowing needs (monitor accounts receivable days)
Tax Planning
- Claim all available capital allowances and reliefs
- Use the Annual Investment Allowance (currently £1 million) for qualifying capital expenditure
- Consider R&D tax credits where applicable
Reporting Net Profit Under FRS 102
Under FRS 102, the income statement must show profit or loss for the period. The standard requires the following line items at minimum:
- Revenue (turnover)
- Finance costs
- Tax expense
- Profit or loss for the period
Additional line items, headings, and subtotals must be presented when this is relevant to understanding the company’s financial performance. Most companies present gross profit, operating profit, and profit before tax as intermediate subtotals.
The profit or loss for the period is then allocated between amounts attributable to owners and non-controlling interests (if applicable) in the statement of changes in equity .
Net Profit and Cash Flow
Net profit does not equal cash generated. The cash flow statement reconciles the two by adjusting for:
| Adjustment | Reason |
|---|---|
| Add back depreciation | Non-cash expense |
| Increase in accounts receivable | Cash not yet collected |
| Increase in stock | Cash tied up in inventory |
| Increase in accounts payable | Cash not yet paid out |
| Capital expenditure | Cash spent on assets not charged to income statement |
A profitable business can still run out of cash if it grows too fast, carries too much stock, or allows customers to pay too slowly.