Shopify Break-Even Price Calculator
This calculator finds your break-even product price on Shopify: the minimum price where the order does not lose money after fees and your cost stack. It also outputs a target price for your desired profit per order, plus a simple sensitivity view to keep decisions stable when fees or shipping drift.
It is built for ecommerce sellers who need to set a price floor, validate promotions, and choose shipping strategy without accidentally pricing below true contribution.
Built for decision-making: guardrails, planning targets, and sensitivity checks.
Calculator
Model fees and true per-order costs to solve for price.
Formulas
Break-even floor, target price, and profit at current price.
| Line item | Value |
|---|---|
| Fee base | Product |
| Percent total | 0.00% |
| Processing fixed fee | $0.00 |
| Net shipping (charged minus cost) | $0.00 |
| Returns provision | $0.00 |
| Fixed cost stack (excl percent fees) | $0.00 |
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EcommerceProfitTools calculators are built to be practical and decision-ready, but real ecommerce data can vary by marketplace, category rules, fee schedules, and tax setup. If you spot a mistake, a broken input, an incorrect formula, or a link that doesn’t work, please email us — we’ll review and correct it.
Break-Even Analytics
Interpretation
Break-even is a price floor. If your current price is close to it, small fee or shipping changes can flip your order from profit to loss.
Decision rules
If profit at current price is negative, you have only three levers: raise price, reduce fixed stack, or reduce percent take rate. The calculator shows which component dominates.
Planning logic
Use target price for a planned profit per order. That is your unit economics guardrail for ads, promos, and product expansion.
Common mistakes
Using only processing percent and ignoring fixed fee, underestimating packaging and handling, and forgetting returns provision for return-heavy categories.
Sensitivity explanation
If a modest price decrease makes profit negative, the SKU is fragile. Use this to set discount limits and decide if you need a different offer structure.
Pro tips
Shopify payment rates and extra third-party transaction fees vary by plan and region. Use your admin and plan docs as the source of truth. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
FAQ
Break-even price is the minimum product price where the order profit equals zero after percent fees, fixed fees, shipping net, and your per-order cost stack.
Some setups apply percent fees to the product subtotal only, while others effectively apply percent fees to the total amount paid, including shipping charged. Choose the option that matches your statement behavior.
If you use a third-party payment provider instead of Shopify Payments, Shopify can charge an additional percent per transaction. The exact rate depends on plan and context. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
For decision-grade pricing, yes. If you omit them, you may set a floor that is too low for real contribution, especially in return-heavy categories or ad-driven acquisition.
Shopify provides guidance on how to view current payment rates in your admin and documentation. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
Break-Even Pricing Mechanics
What break-even really means
Break-even price is not a “nice-to-have number”. It is the price floor where your order stops losing money. If you discount below break-even, you are buying revenue at a loss. Decision-grade pricing starts with a floor and then adds a target profit buffer that matches your category volatility.
Percent fees versus fixed fees
Payment processing often includes a percent plus a fixed fee. The percent scales with the amount charged, while the fixed fee hurts more on lower-priced items. This is why low AOV stores need stricter floors.
Shipping net and fee base
Shipping can be a profit center or a hidden subsidy. Model it as net shipping: shipping charged minus shipping cost. The calculator lets you pick a fee base because percent fees can behave differently depending on setup and reporting.
Edge cases that break naive break-even models
- Return-heavy categories: add a returns provision so your floor does not collapse during promotions.
- Ad-driven acquisition: include ad cost per order to compute a floor that protects contribution after ads.
- Bundles and multi-item orders: allocate packaging and handling realistically, not by best-case assumptions.
- Free shipping promos: if shipping charged drops to zero, your product price must carry the delivery cost.
How to use break-even in business decisions
- Pricing strategy: set your public price above break-even by a buffer that survives volatility.
- Discount limits: define the maximum discount where sensitivity stays non-negative.
- Cost optimization: reduce the fixed stack first if your floor is too high for the market.
- Offer redesign: if you cannot reach a stable target, change bundle size, shipping policy, or fulfillment mode.
Expert Positioning
This tool is designed to be decision-grade: it solves for a real price floor using percent fees, fixed fees, shipping net, and per-order costs. That prevents the most expensive mistake in ecommerce: scaling an offer that only works in a narrow best-case.
The philosophy is constraints versus strategy. Strategy is how you price and position. Constraints are the guardrails: break-even floor, target profit buffer, and sensitivity stability. When constraints are explicit, promotions and growth become repeatable.
Price floors are not opinions. They are math that protects scaling.