Profit Margin vs Markup: Key Differences to Boost Pricing
Profit margin is the slice of revenue left after costs; markup is the extra you add to cost before setting price. One looks back, the other forward.
Shopkeepers often say “50% markup” and think they’re pocketing half the sale—until the bills arrive. The words sound similar, so brains swap them and margins feel smaller than expected.
Key Differences
Margin is a share of the final price; markup is a boost on the cost. Margin can’t exceed 100%, but markup can. Margin guides profit health; markup guides sticker price.
Which One Should You Choose?
Use markup when pricing goods fast; use margin when reviewing profit goals. Many businesses set with markup, then check with margin.
Examples and Daily Life
You buy a mug for $4, sell for $6. Markup: $2 above cost. Margin: $2 out of $6 sale. Same dollars, different lenses.
Can markup ever be lower than margin?
No—markup is always calculated on a smaller base (cost), so the same dollar amount yields a higher percentage than margin.
Do retailers ever show margin to customers?
Rarely; margin is internal. Customers see the final price, not the behind-the-scenes math.
Is one method more “honest” than the other?
Neither is deceptive; they simply answer different questions: “How much did we add?” versus “How much do we keep?”