You know the feeling. Revenue is coming in, payroll is due, vendors need to get paid, and your bank balance still makes you uneasy.
I see this all the time with owners around West Chester and Greater Philadelphia. A contractor is booked out. A clinic has a full schedule. A consulting firm is busy every week. But when I ask a simple question, the room gets quiet.
At what point do you stop losing money each month?
Most owners know their sales. Many know their expenses. Far fewer know their break even analysis calculation. That's the number that tells you when the business has covered its costs and when each additional sale starts helping you build profit instead of just keeping the lights on.
If you don't know that number, you're guessing on pricing, hiring, and growth. Busy is not the same as profitable.
The Most Important Number You're Not Tracking
A contractor in the Philadelphia suburbs might look solid from the outside. Crews are working. Trucks are moving. Invoices are going out. But if material costs keep climbing and change orders aren't priced right, that owner can work flat out and still not make real money.
A healthcare practice can face the same problem. Full appointment slots do not automatically result in healthy margins. If staffing costs, software, billing support, and payroll taxes are not aligned with what each visit or service line contributes, the owner ends up stressed and confused.
That's why I push owners to find one number first. Break-even.
What break-even really tells you
Break-even is the point where your revenue covers your fixed and variable costs. Not your dream target. Not your hopeful budget. Your actual minimum.
Once you know it, decisions get clearer:
- Pricing decisions become less emotional. You can see whether a lower fee wins useful business or just creates more work for the same pain.
- Hiring decisions stop being gut calls. You can test whether a new office manager, estimator, or clinician makes sense.
- Sales targets become grounded in reality. Your team knows the floor before you start talking about growth.
You don't need more reports. You need one number you can trust.
For service businesses, this matters even more because “units” aren't always obvious. A law firm doesn't sell boxes. A medical practice doesn't sell pallets. A bookkeeping firm doesn't sell widgets. You may be selling billable hours, monthly retainers, projects, visits, or jobs.
That doesn't make break-even less useful. It makes it more useful.
The fog lifts fast
When an owner finally sees their break-even number, I usually get the same reaction. Relief first. Then a little frustration.
Relief because the business finally has a clear line in the sand. Frustration because they realize they should've been tracking it sooner.
If you're making decisions based only on revenue, you're driving by looking at the speedometer and ignoring the fuel gauge. That's fine until you're stranded.
The Building Blocks of Your Break-Even Calculation
Accurate cost classification is the essential first step in your calculation. Many business owners struggle with this specific task.
Break-even is built on three parts. Fixed costs, variable costs, and contribution margin. Get those right, and the calculation gets simple.

Fixed costs
Fixed costs are the bills you pay whether you sell a lot or a little.
Think about expenses like:
- Office or shop rent if you're in West Chester, King of Prussia, or downtown Philly
- Software subscriptions for scheduling, accounting, project management, or EHR tools
- Base salaries for admin staff or management
- Insurance and licenses that stay in place no matter how busy you are
If your phones barely ring next month, these costs still show up.
Variable costs
Variable costs move with the work.
In construction, that might be job materials, subcontractor labor, permit costs tied to a project, or equipment rental tied to a job. In healthcare, it could be supplies tied to patient volume. In professional services, it may be contractor hours, direct software pass-through costs, or project-specific labor.
No work, no variable cost. More work, more variable cost.
Contribution margin
This is the piece owners need to understand cold. The contribution margin is your selling price minus your variable cost per unit. It's the money left from each sale that helps cover fixed costs first, then becomes profit after fixed costs are covered.
A simple example from NetSuite's break-even explanation makes this clear. A cupcake store with $10,000 in annual fixed costs, a $6.00 selling price, and $0.50 variable cost per unit has a $5.50 contribution margin, so it needs to sell 1,819 units to break even.
That example is a bakery, but the logic is the same for your business.
Practical rule: If you don't know your contribution margin, you don't really know whether a sale helps you.
If you need a plain-English walkthrough, this guide on contribution margin in accounting is worth reading.
A quick way to think about it
Here's the simplest mental model:
| Term | Plain-English meaning | Real-world example |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed costs | Bills that stay put | Rent, software, admin salary |
| Variable costs | Costs tied to work performed | Materials, contractor labor, supplies |
| Contribution margin | What each sale leaves behind to cover overhead | Fee minus direct job cost |
Owners get in trouble when they mix these buckets. If you throw everything into one pile, the break even analysis calculation becomes junk. And junk math leads to bad decisions.
Calculating Your Break-Even Point in Units and Dollars
You bid a job, sign a new client, or add a provider to the schedule. The question is the same every time. How much work has to come in before this pays for itself?
That is what your break-even number answers.
Break-even in units
Use the unit formula when you sell something repeatable. That could be a monthly bookkeeping package, a standard cleaning visit, a patient exam, or a defined service call.
Break-Even Point (Units) = Fixed Costs / (Selling Price per Unit – Variable Cost per Unit)
Here is a simple example. Say your firm has $15,000 in fixed monthly costs. You charge $100 for a standard service, and the direct variable cost is $60. Your contribution margin is $40 per unit.
$15,000 / $40 = 375 units
So you need to sell 375 units before you make a dollar of profit.
That number should change how you operate. If 375 units is more volume than your team can realistically deliver, the math is warning you that the problem is not effort. The problem is price, direct cost, overhead, or all three.
Break-even in dollars
For many service businesses, units are messy. A construction company sells jobs of different sizes. A therapy practice has sessions, evaluations, and insurance mixes. A law firm may bill hourly, on flat fees, and on retainers at the same time.
In those cases, use revenue.
Break-Even in Dollars = Fixed Costs / Contribution Margin Ratio
And the contribution margin ratio is:
Contribution Margin per Unit / Selling Price per Unit
Using the same numbers, a business with $15,000 in fixed costs, a $100 price, and $60 in variable cost has a 40% contribution margin ratio.
$15,000 / 0.40 = $37,500
So the business needs $37,500 in revenue to break even.
For a service owner, this is usually the better management number. You may not sell neat little "units," but you do know whether the business can produce $37,500 this month without chaos, overtime, or wrecking cash flow.
Which version should you use
Use the version that matches how you run the business:
- Use units if you sell standard packages, repeatable appointments, or a consistent job type.
- Use dollars if your revenue comes from mixed services, projects, retainers, or insurance reimbursement.
- Use both if you want to test pricing decisions and capacity at the same time.
A contractor might track break-even in revenue for the company, then also track units as completed jobs for one core service line. A clinic might use revenue for the practice, then visits per provider for staffing decisions. A consulting firm may use monthly revenue overall and billable hours for one team.
If you want a fast gut check before building your own model, this break even calculator for solopreneurs is a useful place to start. If you want something you can hand to your office manager or bookkeeper, use this break-even analysis template for small business owners.
Why this number matters
Break-even is not a finance exercise. It is a decision tool.
If your break-even revenue is too close to your normal monthly sales, you have no cushion. One slow month, one delayed project, or one vacant provider schedule puts pressure on payroll and owner draws. If your break-even point drops after a price increase, process improvement, or vendor change, you just bought your business more breathing room.
That is the point of doing the math. Use it to set prices, judge hiring timing, and decide whether your current sales target is realistic.
From Napkin Math to Your Spreadsheet
Most owners first do this math in their head, on a legal pad, or in the notes app on their phone. That's fine for five minutes. After that, put it in a spreadsheet.
A simple sheet will beat memory every time.

Set up five core inputs
Open Excel or Google Sheets and create labels for these cells:
- Price per Unit
- Variable Cost per Unit
- Fixed Costs
- Break-Even Units
- Break-Even Dollars
Keep it clean. Don't build a monster workbook on day one.
Then plug in formulas.
Copy-paste formulas
Assume this setup:
| Cell | Label |
|---|---|
| C1 | Price per Unit |
| C2 | Variable Cost per Unit |
| C3 | Fixed Costs |
Use these formulas:
Break-Even Units
=C3/(C1-C2)Break-Even Dollars
=C3/((C1-C2)/C1)
That's enough to give you a working model.
Build the sheet so you can change one number and instantly see the effect on break-even.
Make it usable, not fancy
Owners waste time making spreadsheets pretty before they make them useful. Start with one service line or one common job type.
If you're a contractor, build one version for your typical renovation job and another for larger jobs. If you run a clinic, build one for each main service line. If you're in professional services, use a version for retainer work and another for project work.
Then save copies and test scenarios like:
- Price changes when you think the market won't accept an increase
- Direct labor changes when contractor rates or wages shift
- Fixed cost changes before you hire or lease more space
If you want a stronger foundation for this kind of planning, Numeric has a useful note on building effective financial models.
And if you'd rather not build one from scratch, a simple break-even analysis template can save you time.
What the spreadsheet really gives you
The spreadsheet isn't the goal. The speed of decision-making is.
When your estimator asks whether to discount a job, when your practice manager wants to add staff, or when a client pushes back on fees, you shouldn't need two weeks of cleanup to answer. You should be able to open the file, change a few cells, and know whether the move makes sense.
That's when finance starts helping operations instead of slowing it down.
Putting Your Break-Even Number to Work
Monday morning. Your estimator wants to cut price to win a job, your office manager wants to hire help, and payroll hits on Friday. Your break-even number should answer all three conversations fast. If it only lives in a spreadsheet, it is not doing its job.
Use it to set prices that actually support the business
Small business owners often price from the market backward. That is how you stay busy and stay broke.
Start with the break-even number, then ask a harder question. How many jobs, patients, or billable clients do you need at this price to cover overhead and leave a margin worth the effort? In construction, that might mean quoting fewer low-margin jobs and focusing on the work that covers labor risk and admin load. In a clinic, it might mean adjusting the mix of services or tightening scheduling so each provider day carries its weight. In professional services, it often means raising rates on custom project work that eats partner time.
A price increase does not need to lose you business to be a smart move. Sometimes it gives you room to serve fewer clients better, reduce strain on the team, and improve cash flow at the same time.
Use it before you hire, not after
Every hire adds fixed cost. Salary is only the start. Add payroll taxes, benefits, software, equipment, training time, and management attention.
Run the math before you make the offer. If you are a contractor adding a project manager, how many more jobs can you run cleanly, and what gross profit do those jobs need to produce? If you own a healthcare practice and want another front-desk person, how many more appointments can you schedule and collect on each month? If you lead a consulting firm and want an account manager, how much client retention or partner capacity does that role need to create?
Hope is not a hiring plan.
Use it to test how fragile your model is
Break-even analysis is also a stress test. You are checking how quickly the number moves when real life shows up.
Run a few scenarios that match your business:
- A price cut to win volume
- Higher field labor or contractor rates
- Materials increases on core jobs
- Lower utilization or fewer appointments
- New overhead before revenue catches up
If a small shift pushes break-even out of reach, the issue is not the spreadsheet. The issue is the model. You may need better pricing discipline, tighter labor control, or a different service mix. If you want ideas beyond cost cutting, this guide on how to increase business profitability is a practical next read.
Use it alongside cash flow
This is the part owners miss.
A business can clear break-even on paper and still run short on cash. Construction companies live this every day when receivables lag and payroll is due weekly. Medical practices feel it when insurance payments drag. Professional service firms feel it when clients approve invoices slowly but expect work to continue.
So pair your break-even number with timing. Ask how long it takes to collect cash, when fixed costs hit, and how much cushion you need if sales slow for 30 to 60 days. Break-even tells you when the business works. Cash flow tells you whether you can survive long enough to get there.
Common Break-Even Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
Most bad break-even work comes from bad inputs, not bad formulas.
The math is simple. The judgment is where people slip.
Mistake one, misclassifying costs
This is the biggest one. A cost that looks fixed may not be fully fixed. A cost that looks variable may include a fixed base.
According to QuickBooks' break-even analysis discussion, treating semi-variable expenses as purely fixed can inflate the calculated break-even point by 22-35%. That matters. If your payroll has a base salary plus incentive pay, or your field labor changes by workload, classify it correctly.
If you don't, the answer looks precise and still leads you in the wrong direction.
Mistake two, using one average for everything
A lot of owners run one break even analysis calculation for the whole company and call it a day. That's too blunt.
If you run multiple service lines, the margins aren't the same. A small consulting engagement doesn't carry the same economics as a longer retainer. A simple outpatient service isn't the same as a more complex procedure mix. A small repair job isn't the same as a larger construction project.
QuickBooks also notes that for multi-service businesses, using a single average contribution margin is a major error, and the right fix is a weighted-average contribution margin based on sales mix.
One business can have one legal entity and several very different break-even points.
Mistake three, calculating it once and forgetting it
Costs move. Pricing changes. Vendor terms shift. Payroll creeps up. The old break-even number gets stale fast.
Review it on a regular cadence. Quarterly is a good discipline for many businesses. Monthly is better if your costs swing or your sales mix changes often.
Use the number as a living tool. Not a one-time homework assignment.
If your numbers feel busy but not clear, that's fixable. MyOfficeOps helps business owners in construction, healthcare, and professional services get clean books, better reporting, and CFO-level guidance that turns break-even math into real decisions on pricing, hiring, cash flow, and profit. If you want straight answers without jargon, start a conversation.



