Amazon ROI Calculator
The Amazon ROI Calculator helps you measure real return on investment after Amazon referral fees, FBA fulfillment, storage, shipping, and advertising costs. Instead of looking only at profit, this calculator shows how efficiently your inventory capital is working — expressed as ROI percentage.
In seconds, you can calculate ROI %, net profit, margin, and break-even efficiency thresholds. This allows you to evaluate whether a product is scalable, too risky, or capital-inefficient before committing to inventory or increasing ad spend.
Use this tool to validate supplier quotes, compare product ideas, adjust pricing, and test PPC impact. The result: structured financial clarity, safer scaling decisions, and capital deployed with precision.
Amazon Tools
Amazon ROI Calculator
Calculate ROI, net profit, margin and cash velocity after Amazon fees, FBA, inbound, returns and ads. Includes premium analytics: target ROI price, break-even, safe PPC limit, units to goal, sensitivity & breakdown.
Calculator
ReadyROI = Net Profit ÷ Investable Cost. Cash Velocity = ROI × (365 ÷ cycle days).
Results
—| Cost Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Total Costs | $0.00 |
How it’s calculated (Formulas)
Referral fee = Price × (Referral % ÷ 100)
Returns provision = ReturnsRate × (Price + ReturnCost)
Fixed per unit = MonthlyFixed ÷ Units/Month
Tax provision = Price × (Tax % ÷ 100)
Total Costs = sum of all cost items
Net Profit = Price − Total Costs
Margin = Profit ÷ Price
Investable cost = COGS + Inbound + Prep + Other + Storage
ROI = Profit ÷ InvestableCost
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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.
How Amazon ROI Works
Amazon ROI (Return on Investment) shows how efficiently your product cost (COGS) generates profit after marketplace fees and the costs you include (prep, inbound, storage, returns reserve, PPC, etc.). Sellers use ROI to compare SKUs and decide what deserves inventory and budget.
A high ROI can still be fragile if margin is tight. That’s why ROI is best read together with margin, break-even, and sensitivity (how results change if price shifts).
Net Profit is selling price minus Amazon fees (referral, fulfillment where applicable) and your included costs. If you want ROI without ads, set PPC to 0 in your calculator inputs.
ROI changes fast because Amazon costs include both percentage-based fees (referral, sometimes tax) and fixed-per-unit costs (fulfillment, prep, inbound, packaging). Percentage fees scale with price; fixed costs don’t — which makes low-priced items more sensitive.
If a small price drop flips profit negative, the SKU is too close to break-even or has an expensive cost stack.
Advanced ROI Analytics
Margin logic
Margin answers “% of price left after costs.” ROI answers “% return on COGS.” High ROI with low margin is fragile: PPC spikes, returns, or coupons erase profit quickly.
Break-even logic
Break-even price is where profit becomes 0 after fees and costs. If your current price is close to break-even, ROI is not “safe” — it’s sensitive to small changes in fees, returns, or ad spend.
Sensitivity explanation
Sensitivity scenarios show profit/ROI at ±10% price. If -10% turns to loss, your listing is exposed to price wars. If +10% barely improves profit, you’re likely fee-heavy or cost-heavy.
Decision guidance
- High ROI, low margin: reduce variable costs, tighten PPC, raise price carefully.
- Low ROI, solid margin: negotiate COGS, improve sourcing, increase volume.
- Near break-even: avoid aggressive promos; treat PPC as risk.
- Loss at -10%: rethink differentiation or category economics.
Practical Use Cases
When to use
Compare products across suppliers, screen SKUs, and set a minimum ROI rule for purchasing decisions.
Pricing decisions
Test price changes and see whether ROI improves or breaks under small discounts.
PPC decisions
Model ROI with and without ads to understand how much PPC your unit economics can support.
Category decisions
Adjust referral assumptions by category and evaluate whether the fee structure makes ROI sustainable.
FAQ
ROI (%) = (Net Profit ÷ COGS) × 100. Net profit is selling price minus fees and the costs you included in the calculator (for example: referral, fulfillment, inbound, storage, returns reserve, PPC).
Referral fees vary by category and marketplace. Many categories are commonly in the 8–15% range, but some are higher/lower and may include minimums or tiers.
Fixed per-unit costs don’t shrink when you discount, while percentage fees follow price. This combination can make profit very sensitive near break-even.
Only if you include a tax/VAT provision in the calculator inputs. If tax is set to 0, ROI is calculated without tax.
Include PPC for realistic profitability and launch planning. For sourcing comparisons, evaluate both: ROI without ads and ROI with expected ads.
Platform Fee Structure
Percentage vs Fixed Fees
Amazon costs are usually a blend of percentage-based fees (like referral fee) and fixed-per-unit fees (fulfillment, prep, inbound, packaging assumptions). Percentage fees scale with selling price; fixed fees do not. This matters because low-priced items become more sensitive: the same fixed fee consumes a larger share of revenue, compressing profit and lowering ROI.
Category Variations
Referral schedules differ by category, and some categories can have minimum fees or tiered structures. ROI comparisons must use category-correct referral assumptions, otherwise the model overstates profitability. Category also changes operational dynamics: returns, damage, and support costs can be structurally higher in certain niches.
Real-world Impact
ROI is most valuable as a decision filter. Strong ROI with weak margin can be profitable yet fragile under coupons, PPC inflation, or returns spikes. Moderate ROI with strong margin can be more resilient and scalable because there’s room for promotions and advertising.
Risk Factors
- Returns & refunds: reduce effective profit and can force higher pricing to stay above break-even.
- Fee changes: small updates can materially impact thin-margin SKUs.
- PPC volatility: rising CPC compresses profit quickly if buffer is small.
- Price competition: sensitivity losses at modest discounts indicate exposure to price wars.
Expert Positioning
This ROI tool exists for one reason: financial precision in real Amazon decisions. We use structured, unit-level modeling so you can compare products consistently, stress-test pricing, and understand how fee mechanics influence ROI.
It’s not a “rough estimate” — it’s a reusable framework for sourcing, launching, and scaling.