Author: Tharanga Sampath
Indirect Tax
Gross Profit Margin
Gross Profit
What is gross profit?
Gross profit (definition)
Gross profit is the money you have left after paying for the things you sold to customers.
You don’t get to keep gross profit. You still need to pay other operating expenses and taxes from this pot of money.
Gross Profit Formula
Revenue – Cost of Goods Sold = Gross Profit
Gross profit tells you how much money you made on sales. The higher it is, the more money you have to cover operating expenses like office supplies, rent, and loan repayments. And the more chance you have of generating net profit. Gross profit appears on your profit and loss statement.
Financial Reporting
Fixed Cost
What is a fixed cost?
Fixed cost (definition)
Fixed costs are expenses that stay the same no matter how much activity a business is doing. They’re the opposite of variable costs.
Fixed costs have to be paid even if a business doesn’t do any trade for the day. They tend to include regular recurring costs like leases, wages and insurance.
Examples of fixed costs
- Rent of premises
- Rates
- Insurance
- Utilities (can be variable depending on circumstances)
- Lease of equipment
- Permanent labor (can be variable depending on circumstances)
- Web development
Why fixed costs matter
Fixed costs don’t change much from week to week or month to month. That means it’s relatively simple to predict and budget for them. The higher fixed costs are, the more sales a business has to make in order to break even.
How fixed costs differ from variable costs
A cost is either fixed or variable. It can’t be both.
Variable costs go up and down with your level of business activity. They include things like:
- Costs of providing goods or services to customers (cost of sales)
- Marketing and sales activity
- Transaction fees