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Glossary

What is Gross Margin? Definition, Formula & Industry Benchmarks

Learn what gross margin means, how to calculate gross profit margin, and what constitutes a good gross margin by industry.

What is Gross Margin?

Gross margin (also called gross profit margin) measures the percentage of revenue remaining after subtracting the direct costs of producing goods or services. It shows how efficiently a company turns revenue into gross profit before operating expenses.

Gross Margin Formula

$$\text{Gross Margin} = \frac{\text{Revenue} - \text{Cost of Goods Sold}}{\text{Revenue}} \times 100%$$

Or equivalently:

$$\text{Gross Margin} = \frac{\text{Gross Profit}}{\text{Revenue}} \times 100%$$

Example Calculation

If a company has:

  • Revenue: $100 million
  • Cost of Goods Sold: $40 million

Gross Profit = $100M - $40M = $60M Gross Margin = ($60M ÷ $100M) × 100% = 60%

What’s Included in Cost of Goods Sold (COGS)?

Industry Typical COGS Items
Manufacturing Raw materials, factory labor, equipment depreciation
Retail Wholesale purchase cost, shipping to stores
Software Hosting costs, customer support, licensing fees
Services Labor costs to deliver service

Gross Margin by Industry

Different industries have vastly different typical gross margins:

Industry Typical Gross Margin
Software/SaaS 70-85%
Pharmaceuticals 70-80%
Digital Advertising 60-80%
Consumer Products 40-60%
Retail 25-50%
Restaurants 60-70%
Airlines 20-40%
Grocery 25-35%
Automobiles 10-20%

What’s a Good Gross Margin?

A “good” gross margin depends on the industry:

Margin Level General Assessment
70%+ Excellent (software, pharma)
50-70% Above average
30-50% Average
Under 30% Below average (but normal for some industries)

Real Company Examples

Company Gross Margin Industry
Microsoft 70% Software
Apple 46% Consumer Electronics
Nike 45% Apparel
Costco 13% Retail
Amazon 47% E-commerce/Cloud

Why Gross Margin Matters

1. Pricing Power

High gross margins indicate strong pricing power and brand value.

2. Competitive Position

Companies with higher margins than competitors often have sustainable advantages.

3. Operating Leverage

Higher gross margins provide more cushion for operating expenses.

4. Trend Analysis

Declining gross margins may signal competitive pressure or cost increases.

Gross Margin vs. Operating Margin

Metric What It Excludes
Gross Margin COGS only
Operating Margin COGS + operating expenses (R&D, S&M, G&A)

A company can have high gross margins but low operating margins if it spends heavily on sales or R&D.

Factors That Affect Gross Margin

Increase Gross Margin:

  • Price increases
  • Lower input costs
  • Operational efficiency
  • Product mix shift to higher-margin items
  • Scale economies

Decrease Gross Margin:

  • Competition and price pressure
  • Rising costs (labor, materials)
  • Promotions and discounts
  • Supply chain issues

Limitations of Gross Margin

  1. Industry differences: Not comparable across different sectors
  2. Doesn’t include OpEx: High gross margin doesn’t mean profitable
  3. Accounting variations: Different COGS classifications
  4. Mix changes: Shifts in product/service mix affect margin

This glossary entry is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.