WooCommerce Tax VAT GST Calculator

This calculator models VAT, GST, and sales tax the same way WooCommerce pricing decisions happen in real stores: tax-exclusive (tax added on top) or tax-inclusive (tax extracted from the displayed price).

Use it to validate price floors, prevent margin leakage under tax-inclusive settings, and estimate tax liability per order before profit, break-even, and ROI decisions.

Built for decision-making: guardrails, planning targets, and sensitivity checks.

WooCommerce Tax / VAT / GST Calculator

Model tax-exclusive and tax-inclusive pricing. Output tax amount, net revenue, customer total, tax share, plus guardrails and sensitivity.

Presets fill planning fields (editable)

Calculator

Ready
Subtotal of items for the order.
Assumed applied before tax. Set 0 if not used.
What customer pays for shipping.
Choose the logic that matches your WooCommerce display settings.
Primary VAT / GST / sales tax rate.
Some jurisdictions tax shipping. Model the correct rule.
Enter Items Subtotal and Tax Rate, then click Calculate.

Results

Tax Amount
$0.00
Net Revenue
$0.00
Customer Total
$0.00
Tax Share
0.00%
Total: –
MetricValue
Combined rate0.00%
How it is calculated (Formulas)

Subtotal after discount = subtotal – discount

Tax base = subtotal after discount (+ shipping if taxable)

Exclusive: tax = tax base x rate

Inclusive: tax = tax base – tax base / (1 + rate)

Customer total = subtotal after discount + shipping (+ tax in exclusive)

Tax share = tax / customer total

Mode Diagnosis
Enter numbers to see rating.
Tax Base
Post-discount base, plus shipping if taxable.
Guardrail
Target tax share check.
Shipping Tax Impact
Extra tax when shipping is taxable.
Estimated Tax Liability
Tax per order multiplied by order count.
Decision Notes

Notice something off? Tell us — we fix fast.

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.

Include: page URL + screenshots (if possible) + the numbers you entered + what result you expected.
Best case: a Seller Central reference or fee schedule note (marketplace/region) so we can align logic correctly.
Email support
support@ecommerceprofittools.com We use reports to improve accuracy and UX across all tools.
Note: results are estimates for planning and comparison. Always validate final numbers against your marketplace statements and professional accounting where applicable.

Analytics: Interpretation and Decision Rules

Interpretation
The same tax rate produces different business outcomes depending on pricing mode. Exclusive mode adds tax on top. Inclusive mode extracts tax from the displayed price and compresses net revenue.
Decision rules
If you operate in inclusive pricing, treat tax as a constraint. Validate net revenue per order before discounting or scaling. Price floors must be set on net revenue, not displayed price.
Planning logic
Tax base usually uses post-discount subtotal. If shipping is taxable, tax base increases. That makes free shipping decisions and shipping fees relevant to tax liability.
Common mistakes
Mixing inclusive and exclusive assumptions, ignoring shipping tax rules, applying discounts after tax in planning, and using gross price in profit models.
Sensitivity explanation
Rate changes or classification changes can shift net revenue. Sensitivity shows how tax and net revenue move when tax rate moves by points. Use it to stress-test price floors and promotions.
Pro tips
Tax outputs should be used before Profit, Break-even, and ROI. Build constraints first: net revenue, then cost stack, then strategy.

FAQ

WooCommerce Tax VAT GST: Definitions, Mechanics, Edge Cases, Application

Tax is not a cosmetic checkout line. It changes the revenue base used to fund costs and profit. The key operational decision is whether the store price is tax exclusive or tax inclusive. That choice determines whether tax is added on top or extracted from the listed price.

Definitions
Tax exclusive means the base price is pre-tax and tax is added at checkout. Tax inclusive means the displayed price includes tax and net revenue is the price minus extracted tax. Tax share is the tax amount divided by what the customer pays.
Platform mechanics
WooCommerce can be configured to display prices including tax or excluding tax. Discounts typically reduce the taxable base. Shipping may be taxable depending on local rules and settings.
Edge cases
Tax inclusive pricing can silently compress margin when you run coupons or hold prices fixed. If shipping is taxable, shipping fees change tax liability. Dual rate setups can exist for combined jurisdiction layers.
How to apply in decisions
Use net revenue after tax as the base for unit economics. Set break-even and profit guardrails on net revenue, then layer COGS, payment fees, shipping costs, and returns provisions. Treat tax as a constraint, not a variable you ignore until accounting.
Decision workflow
Step 1: confirm whether your storefront prices are inclusive or exclusive. Step 2: model tax on post-discount base. Step 3: decide whether shipping should be taxed and quantify impact. Step 4: stress-test tax rate points changes. Step 5: plug net revenue into Profit and Break-even tools to protect price floors.
Practical rule: if inclusive mode is used, tax extraction reduces net revenue. Your minimum safe price floor must be set higher to protect margin.

This tool is decision-grade because it models tax as a constraint on revenue. Tax-inclusive mode changes the real revenue base, which must be reflected in price floors and margin guardrails.

Constraints define strategy. If net revenue after tax does not support your cost stack, the answer is structural: price discipline, offer structure, and guardrails – not more volume.

Decision-grade tools for serious ecommerce operators.