Profit And Loss Statement Calculator

Profit and Loss Statement Calculator | Calculators Online UK
💼 Free Business Tool  ·  calculatorsonline.co.uk

Profit & Loss
Statement Calculator

Build a complete P&L statement for your business in seconds. Enter your revenue, cost of goods, and operating expenses to see gross profit, operating profit, EBITDA and net profit — completely free.

📊 Full P&L statement 📈 Gross & net margins 🧮 EBITDA calculation 📅 Monthly or annual

Enter Your Figures

Fill in your business income and expenses below. Add multiple line items using the + buttons.


📥 Revenue (Income)
Your main income stream
£

🏭 Cost of Goods Sold (COGS)
Materials, production, direct labour
£

💼 Operating Expenses (OpEx)
£
£
£
£

📉 Below-Line Items
£
£
£
📊

Enter your revenue and expenses, then hit Generate P&L Statement.

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Profit & Loss Statement

Key P&L metrics explained

Understanding the key lines in a profit and loss statement and what the numbers mean for your business.

P&L LineFormulaWhat It Tells YouHealthy Range
Gross ProfitRevenue − COGSProfit before operating expensesDepends on industry
Gross Profit MarginGross Profit ÷ Revenue × 100Efficiency of production/delivery40–60% (services), 20–40% (product)
Operating Profit (EBIT)Gross Profit − OpExProfit from core business operations10–20% is solid
EBITDAEBIT + D&ACash operating performance proxyWidely used for valuation
Net ProfitEBIT − Interest − TaxFinal profit after all deductions5–15% is healthy
Net Profit MarginNet Profit ÷ Revenue × 100Overall business profitabilityHigher = more efficient
Break-even PointFixed Costs ÷ Gross Margin %Revenue needed to cover all costsLower is better

COGS = Cost of Goods Sold. EBIT = Earnings Before Interest & Tax. EBITDA = Earnings Before Interest, Tax, Depreciation & Amortisation. D&A = Depreciation & Amortisation.

IndustryAvg Gross MarginAvg Net MarginNotes
Software / SaaS70–85%15–30%High margin
Professional Services50–70%10–25%Consulting, legal, accounting
Retail (general)25–45%2–8%Volume dependent
Food & Beverage60–70%3–9%High labour & waste costs
Construction15–30%2–8%Low margin, high risk
Manufacturing20–40%5–15%Varies widely by product
E-commerce30–50%3–10%High marketing spend
Healthcare / Medical40–60%8–20%

These are broad averages. Individual businesses within each sector can vary significantly. Compare your margins against direct competitors, not just industry averages.

P&L FormatBest ForKey FeatureNotes
Single-step P&LSmall / sole trader businessesAll income minus all expenses = net incomeSimple
Multi-step P&LSMEs and limited companiesShows gross profit, operating profit, then netMost informative
Contribution margin P&LProduct businesses, manufacturingSeparates variable and fixed costsBetter for break-even analysis
EBITDA-focusedInvestment & M&A reportingAdjusts for D&A and financing structureUsed for business valuation
Management accountsInternal monthly reportingIncludes budget vs actual comparisonNot statutory

UK limited companies must file statutory accounts with Companies House — these follow FRS 102 or FRS 105 format. This calculator produces a management accounts-style P&L for internal use.

Understanding your P&L

💰

Gross Profit

Revenue minus the direct cost of producing or delivering your goods/services (COGS). A healthy gross margin means you have enough left over to cover your operating costs and still profit.

📊

Operating Profit (EBIT)

Gross profit minus all operating expenses (rent, salaries, marketing etc.). This shows how profitably your core business runs — before the effects of how you’ve financed it or your tax position.

🔢

EBITDA

Operating profit added back with depreciation and amortisation. It’s a proxy for cash generation from operations and is widely used to compare businesses and value companies for sale or investment.

🎯

Net Profit

The bottom line — what’s left after all costs, interest and tax. This is the true measure of profitability and what can be paid as dividends, reinvested, or retained as cash in the business.

📉

Profit Margins

Expressed as a percentage of revenue, margins tell you how efficient your business is. A business with £1m revenue and 20% net margin earns the same net profit as one with £2m revenue and 10% net margin.

5–15%
Healthy net margin
Across most UK SME sectors
EBITDA
Key valuation metric
Businesses sold at 3–8× EBITDA
25%
UK corporation tax
Main rate 2024/25 onwards
Monthly
Best reporting cadence
Track trends and act early

Frequently asked questions

A profit and loss (P&L) statement — also called an income statement — is a financial report that summarises a business’s revenues, costs and expenses over a period of time. It shows whether the business has made a profit or a loss. The P&L is one of the three core financial statements alongside the balance sheet and cash flow statement.

Gross profit is revenue minus the direct cost of goods sold (COGS) — the cost of producing or delivering your product or service. Net profit (the bottom line) is gross profit minus all other expenses including operating costs, interest and tax. Gross profit tells you how efficiently you produce; net profit tells you whether the whole business is profitable.

EBITDA stands for Earnings Before Interest, Tax, Depreciation and Amortisation. It approximates the cash profit generated by core business operations, stripped of financing and accounting decisions. It’s the most widely used metric for valuing businesses — UK SMEs typically sell for 3–8× EBITDA depending on sector, growth rate and quality of earnings.

UK limited companies must file annual accounts with Companies House. However, for management purposes, preparing a P&L monthly is strongly recommended — it allows you to spot trends, compare against budget, and make timely decisions. Quarterly is acceptable for very small businesses, but monthly reporting is best practice and what most lenders and investors will expect to see.

It varies significantly by sector. A net profit margin of 5–15% is generally considered healthy for UK SMEs. Service businesses (consulting, software, professional services) often achieve 15–30%, while product businesses, retail and food service typically run at 3–10%. More important than the absolute margin is the trend — improving margins over time signal a healthier, scaling business.

The main rate of UK corporation tax is 25% for companies with profits over £250,000. A small profits rate of 19% applies to companies with profits up to £50,000. Companies with profits between £50,000 and £250,000 pay a tapered rate between 19% and 25%. These thresholds apply from April 2023 onwards. Always check the current HMRC rates as they may change.

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