What is Profit Margin?
A guide to profit margins in UK accounting, covering gross margin, operating margin, net margin, sector benchmarks, and how margins are used in financial analysis.
Profit margin is a financial ratio that expresses profit as a percentage of turnover . It measures how much of every pound of revenue is retained as profit after costs are deducted. There are several types of margin, each removing a different set of costs from turnover, and together they reveal where a business is making and losing money.
Profit margins are among the most widely used indicators for assessing business performance, setting prices, and comparing companies within the same sector.
Types of Profit Margin
Gross Profit Margin
Gross Profit Margin = (Gross Profit / Turnover) x 100
This margin shows how much remains after deducting the cost of goods sold . It measures the profitability of the core trading activity.
Operating Profit Margin
Operating Profit Margin = Operating Profit / Turnover x 100
This margin deducts overheads (administrative expenses and distribution costs) from gross profit. It shows how efficiently the business manages its day-to-day operations.
Net Profit Margin
Net Profit Margin = (Net Profit / Turnover) x 100
This margin deducts all costs, including interest and corporation tax. It measures the overall profitability of the business.
Worked Example
| Income Statement Line | £ | Margin |
|---|---|---|
| Turnover | 800,000 | |
| Cost of sales | (320,000) | |
| Gross profit | 480,000 | 60.0% |
| Administrative expenses | (200,000) | |
| Distribution costs | (80,000) | |
| Operating profit | 200,000 | 25.0% |
| Interest payable | (12,000) | |
| Profit before tax | 188,000 | |
| Corporation tax | (47,000) | |
| Net profit | 141,000 | 17.6% |
Each margin level tells a different story. A healthy gross margin with a weak operating margin points to excessive overheads . A healthy operating margin with a weak net margin suggests the business is over-leveraged with debt.
Sector Benchmarks
Margins vary substantially across industries. Comparing against the relevant sector is essential:
| Sector | Typical Gross Margin | Typical Net Margin |
|---|---|---|
| Software and SaaS | 70-85% | 15-25% |
| Professional services | 50-70% | 10-20% |
| Manufacturing | 25-45% | 5-12% |
| Retail (general) | 25-50% | 2-6% |
| Construction | 15-25% | 3-8% |
| Hospitality | 60-70% | 3-10% |
| Wholesale and distribution | 15-30% | 2-5% |
These are broad UK ranges. Individual companies may fall outside them depending on their scale, niche, and business model.
What Drives Margin Changes?
| Factor | Effect on Margin |
|---|---|
| Price increases | Improves all margins (if volume holds) |
| Rising material costs | Reduces gross margin |
| Wage inflation | Reduces gross or operating margin depending on classification |
| Economies of scale | Improves operating margin as fixed costs are spread over more revenue |
| Product mix shift (toward premium) | Improves gross margin |
| Product mix shift (toward commodity) | Reduces gross margin |
| Overhead growth outpacing revenue | Reduces operating margin |
| Increased borrowing | Reduces net margin (higher interest) |
| Tax rate changes | Reduces or improves net margin |
Margin Analysis Over Time
Tracking margins over multiple periods reveals trends:
| Year | Turnover (£) | Gross Margin | Operating Margin | Net Margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 600,000 | 58% | 22% | 16% |
| 2023 | 700,000 | 55% | 20% | 14% |
| 2024 | 800,000 | 60% | 25% | 18% |
In this example, the dip in 2023 followed by recovery in 2024 might indicate a temporary cost increase that was subsequently controlled.
Margin and Break-Even Analysis
The contribution margin is a variant used in break-even analysis:
Contribution Margin = (Selling Price - Variable Costs ) / Selling Price x 100
This differs from gross margin because it separates costs by behaviour (fixed versus variable) rather than by function.
Break-Even Turnover = Fixed Costs / Contribution Margin
If fixed costs are £200,000 and the contribution margin is 40%, the break-even turnover is £500,000.
Margin and Pricing Decisions
Cost-Plus Pricing
Setting prices by adding a target margin to cost:
Selling Price = Cost / (1 - Target Margin)
If unit cost is £30 and the target gross margin is 40%:
Selling Price = £30 / (1 - 0.40) = £50
Margin Erosion
Discounting reduces margin. A 10% discount on a product with a 40% gross margin reduces the margin to 33%:
| Scenario | Selling Price (£) | Cost (£) | Gross Profit (£) | Margin |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Full price | 50 | 30 | 20 | 40% |
| 10% discount | 45 | 30 | 15 | 33% |
| 20% discount | 40 | 30 | 10 | 25% |
To compensate for a 10% price cut while maintaining the same total gross profit, the business would need to sell 33% more units.
Margin and Financial Ratios
Profit margins connect to other ratios examined in financial analysis :
| Ratio | Connection to Margin |
|---|---|
| Return on equity (ROE) | Higher net margin improves ROE |
| Return on capital employed | Higher operating margin improves ROCE |
| Asset turnover | Low-margin businesses need high asset turnover to generate adequate returns |
| Debtor days | Slow collection does not affect margin but erodes the cash benefit of profits |
The DuPont analysis breaks ROE into three components: net margin, asset turnover, and financial leverage. This shows how margin interacts with efficiency and gearing to produce shareholder returns.
Improving Profit Margins
Improving Gross Margin
- Negotiate better purchase prices with suppliers
- Reduce waste and defects in production
- Shift the sales mix toward higher-margin products
- Review pricing, especially for underpriced products
Improving Operating Margin
- Control overhead growth
- Automate administrative processes
- Review staffing levels against workload
- Renegotiate contracts for premises, insurance, and utilities
Improving Net Margin
- Refinance debt at lower interest rates
- Claim all available tax reliefs and capital allowances
- Reduce accounts receivable days to lower overdraft interest
- Consider the tax implications of business structure decisions
Margin in UK Statutory Accounts
Under the Companies Act 2006, companies are not required to disclose margin percentages. However, the profit and loss account must present the figures from which margins can be calculated. Small and micro-entity accounts may file abbreviated formats that omit turnover and cost of sales, making margin analysis impossible for external users of those accounts.
FRS 102 requires the income statement to present sufficient detail for users to understand the company’s performance. For companies with more than one business segment, FRS 102 Section 33 may require segmental analysis of revenue and results, enabling margin analysis by segment.
Margin and Corporation Tax
Corporation tax is the final deduction before net profit. The effective tax rate directly influences the net margin:
| Taxable Profit Band | Rate |
|---|---|
| Up to £50,000 | 19% (small profits rate) |
| £50,001 - £250,000 | Marginal relief (effective rate 26.5%) |
| Above £250,000 | 25% (main rate) |
A company with £200,000 operating profit and a 25% effective tax rate will have a lower net margin than one with the same operating profit but benefiting from the small profits rate.