It’s one of the most important numbers in your business—and one that too many entrepreneurs ignore.
Your break-even point is the moment your business stops losing money and starts making money. It tells you exactly how much you need to sell to cover your costs. No profits. No losses. Just breaking even.
If you don’t know this number, you’re flying blind. You could be growing revenue while still sinking financially. But once you understand your break-even point, everything gets clearer—pricing, marketing, planning, and most of all, decision-making.
Here’s what break-even is, how to calculate it, and why it matters more than most business owners realize.
1. What is break-even?
Your break-even point is the amount of sales you need to cover your total costs—both fixed and variable. It’s the tipping point where revenue equals expenses.
At break-even, you’re not making profit yet—but you’re no longer operating at a loss. Everything you earn after break-even is profit.
2. Why it matters
Knowing your break-even point gives you a realistic target. It tells you how many units you need to sell, how many clients you need to book, or how much monthly revenue you need to stay afloat.
This clarity helps you:
- Set smarter pricing
- Evaluate whether new expenses are justified
- Know how far you are from profit
- Avoid panic-based decisions when cash feels tight
Break-even turns vague goals into measurable thresholds.
3. What goes into the break-even formula
To calculate break-even, you’ll need three key numbers:
- Fixed costs: expenses that don’t change with sales (like rent, software, salaries)
- Variable costs: expenses that increase as you sell more (like product materials, packaging, processing fees)
- Selling price per unit: what you charge for each product, service, or offer
The formula looks like this:
Break-Even Units = Fixed Costs ÷ (Price per Unit – Variable Cost per Unit)
If you’re a service provider, you can adapt the formula to figure out how many billable hours or client packages you need to sell instead of physical units.
4. A simple example
Let’s say you sell a product for $50. It costs you $20 to produce it, and your monthly fixed costs are $3,000.
Break-even = $3,000 ÷ ($50 – $20)
Break-even = $3,000 ÷ $30
Break-even = 100 units
You need to sell 100 products per month to cover your costs. Every sale after that is profit.
5. Break-even is a starting point—not the finish line
The goal isn’t to stay at break-even. It’s to use it as a financial baseline. Once you know how much it takes to break even, you can start forecasting realistic revenue goals, building profit margins, and growing with purpose.
If your current sales don’t cover your break-even, it’s a signal to make changes—either by adjusting your pricing, reducing expenses, or increasing volume.
6. Revisit your break-even regularly
As your expenses shift—whether you’re hiring, changing tools, or launching new offers—your break-even point changes too. Recalculate it every quarter or whenever you make major business changes.
Keeping it current helps you stay proactive, not reactive.
Knowing your break-even isn’t just about survival—it’s about strategy. It keeps your numbers grounded, your decisions smarter, and your path to profitability more visible.
Action Step
Calculate your break-even point using your current pricing, fixed costs, and variable costs. If the number surprises you, adjust one element—price, expenses, or offer—to make it more manageable. This number is your new baseline. Don’t guess—know it.





