Setting prices is one of the most critical decisions you’ll make as a business owner. Price too high, and customers walk away. Price too low, and you lose money on every sale—or worse, go out of business.
In this article, I explain the four fundamental factors of pricing, how to calculate them, and how to find a price that covers your costs, generates profit, and keeps your business sustainable.
📌 The Four Factors of Pricing
To set a price that works, you need to consider four elements:
| Factor | What It Covers |
|---|---|
| Materials | Direct costs of producing your product or service |
| Business expenses | Overhead costs to keep your business running |
| Profit margin | Your earnings after all costs |
| Break-even point | Minimum sales needed to cover costs |
💡 Skipping any of these factors leads to prices that either lose money or fail to sustain your business.
1. 🛠️ Materials: What Goes Into Your Product or Service
Materials are the direct costs required to create what you sell. These are sometimes called cost of goods sold (COGS) or variable costs—they change with each unit you produce.
For Products
| Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Raw materials | Ingredients, fabric, wood, metal, paper |
| Packaging | Boxes, bags, labels, containers |
| Components | Parts, fasteners, electronics |
| Consumables | Disposable utensils, cleaning supplies used per unit |
For Services
| Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Supplies | Paper, ink, software licenses, tools |
| Subcontractors | Specialists hired per project |
| Travel | Transportation, lodging for on-site work |
💡 Calculate materials per unit. If you make crepes, how much flour, Nutella, strawberries, and whipped cream goes into each one?
2. 🏢 Business Expenses: Keeping the Lights On
Business expenses are the costs you incur regardless of how many units you sell. These are also called fixed costs or overhead.
| Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Rent | Lease for your space |
| Utilities | Electricity, water, gas, internet |
| Payroll | Salaries (yours and employees) |
| Equipment | Maintenance, depreciation, leasing costs |
| Software | Web hosting, CRM, design tools, payment platforms |
| Marketing | Advertising, social media tools |
| Professional services | Accounting, legal, consulting |
| Insurance | Liability, property, workers’ comp |
💡 These costs exist whether you sell one unit or one thousand. They must be covered by your pricing.
3. 📈 Profit Margin: What You Keep
Profit is what’s left after covering all costs. It’s not greed—it’s what allows you to:
- Reinvest in your business
- Handle emergencies
- Grow and expand
- Reward yourself for your work
| Type of Profit | Definition |
|---|---|
| Gross profit | Revenue minus materials (what covers overhead + profit) |
| Net profit | Revenue minus all costs (what you actually keep) |
What Margin Should You Aim For?
| Industry | Typical Gross Margin | Typical Net Margin |
|---|---|---|
| Food service | 30-40% | 3-6% |
| Retail | 25-35% | 2-5% |
| Manufacturing | 30-45% | 5-10% |
| Services | 50-70% | 10-20% |
| Software | 70-85% | 15-25% |
💡 A 100% margin (selling for double your material cost) is common in some industries, but it doesn’t mean 100% profit—you still have overhead and taxes to pay.
4. ⚖️ Break-Even Point: When You Stop Losing Money
The break-even point is the number of units you must sell (or revenue you must generate) to cover all your costs. Below this, you lose money. Above this, you make profit.
Break-Even Formula
Break-Even Units = Fixed Costs ÷ (Price - Variable Cost per Unit)
Where:
- Fixed Costs: Expenses that don’t change with sales (rent, salaries, etc.)
- Variable Cost per Unit: Materials and other costs per unit
- Price: Your selling price per unit
Example: Small Coffee Shop
| Cost Type | Amount (Monthly) |
|---|---|
| Rent | $10,000 |
| Utilities | $3,000 |
| Salaries (2 people) | $20,000 |
| Insurance & fees | $2,000 |
| Total Fixed Costs | $35,000 |
| Per Coffee | Cost |
|---|---|
| Coffee beans, cup, lid, sugar | $10 |
| Variable Cost per Unit | $10 |
| Price per coffee | $50 |
|---|---|
| Contribution margin | $40 ($50 – $10) |
Break-Even Calculation:
Break-Even Units = $35,000 ÷ ($50 - $10) Break-Even Units = $35,000 ÷ $40 Break-Even Units = 875 coffees per month
💡 This coffee shop must sell 875 coffees monthly just to break even. Every coffee after that is profit.
📊 Putting It All Together: The Crepería Example
Let’s rebuild the crepería example with accurate calculations.
Step 1: Calculate Material Costs per Crepe
| Ingredient | Cost per Unit | Quantity per Crepe | Cost per Crepe |
|---|---|---|---|
| Batter mix | $20 for 10 crepes | 1/10 batch | $2.00 |
| Nutella | $80 for 350g | 20g | $4.57 |
| Whipped cream | $50 for 1L | 20g | $1.00 |
| Strawberries | $60 for 1kg | 50g | $3.00 |
| Plate + napkin | $5 each | 1 | $5.00 |
| Total Materials | $15.57 |
Step 2: Determine Monthly Fixed Costs
| Expense | Monthly Amount |
|---|---|
| Rent | $15,000 |
| Electricity | $3,000 |
| Gas | $2,000 |
| Water | $1,000 |
| Internet | $1,000 |
| Salaries (2 employees) | $20,000 |
| Payment terminal fees | $1,000 |
| Insurance | $2,000 |
| Marketing | $3,000 |
| Total Fixed Costs | $48,000 |
Step 3: Choose Your Price and Calculate Margin
Let’s say you price each crepe at $60.
| Calculation | Amount |
|---|---|
| Price | $60.00 |
| Materials | ($15.57) |
| Gross Profit per Crepe | $44.43 |
Step 4: Calculate Break-Even Point
Break-Even Units = $48,000 ÷ ($60 - $15.57) Break-Even Units = $48,000 ÷ $44.43 Break-Even Units = 1,080 crepes per month
| Concept | Amount |
|---|---|
| Break-even sales | 1,080 crepes |
| Break-even revenue | $64,800 |
Step 5: Project Profit at Different Sales Levels
| Monthly Sales | Revenue | Materials Cost | Fixed Costs | Gross Profit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1,080 crepes | $64,800 | $16,816 | $48,000 | $0 (break-even) |
| 1,500 crepes | $90,000 | $23,355 | $48,000 | $18,645 |
| 2,000 crepes | $120,000 | $31,140 | $48,000 | $40,860 |
💡 At 2,000 crepes per month, the business makes $40,860 profit before taxes.
📋 Common Pricing Mistakes
| Mistake | Consequence | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Not accounting for all costs | You lose money on every sale | Track every expense |
| Pricing based on competitor only | You may be underpricing or overpricing | Know your costs first |
| Ignoring fixed costs | You don’t know your break-even | Include overhead in pricing |
| No profit margin | No money to grow or handle emergencies | Add a margin above costs |
| Discounting without planning | You lose money on every discounted sale | Build discounts into pricing strategy |
💡 The most common fatal mistake: pricing based on what others charge without knowing your own costs.
💡 How to Set a Price That Works
Step 1: Calculate Your Costs
- Material cost per unit: What goes into each product or service
- Monthly fixed costs: All expenses regardless of sales
- Desired profit: What you want to earn
Step 2: Estimate Your Sales Volume
How many units do you realistically expect to sell monthly?
Step 3: Calculate Your Minimum Price
Minimum Price = (Fixed Costs ÷ Estimated Units) + Material Cost per Unit
If you expect to sell 1,500 crepes monthly:
Minimum Price = ($48,000 ÷ 1,500) + $15.57 Minimum Price = $32 + $15.57 Minimum Price = $47.57
This price covers all costs but leaves no profit margin.
Step 4: Add Profit Margin
Add a margin that allows you to reinvest and grow. For food service, a 20-30% gross margin above costs is common.
Suggested price: $60 (covers costs and provides $44.43 gross profit per crepe)
Step 5: Test and Adjust
- If sales are lower than expected, either reduce costs or adjust price
- If sales exceed expectations, consider if price could be raised
- Monitor your actual costs—they change over time
📊 Pricing Strategy Comparison
| Strategy | Example | Best For | Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cost-plus | Cost + markup | Manufacturing, retail | May ignore market |
| Value-based | Price based on perceived value | Services, unique products | Hard to calculate |
| Competitive | Match competitors | Commodity products | May not cover costs |
| Penetration | Low price to enter market | New businesses | Hard to raise later |
| Premium | High price for exclusivity | Luxury, niche | Limited market |
💡 Start with cost-plus to ensure you don’t lose money. Refine as you learn your market.
📋 Pricing Checklist
Before setting your final price, verify:
- ☐ All material costs are included
- ☐ All fixed costs are accounted for
- ☐ You know your break-even point
- ☐ You have a profit margin above break-even
- ☐ The price covers taxes (IVA, ISR)
- ☐ You have room for discounts without losing money
- ☐ The price is competitive for your market
📚 Useful Internal Links
- Income and Expenses: The Foundation of Financial Health
- Profit: The Measure of Business Success
- IVA and ISR: The Two Pillars of Taxation in Mexico
- How to Calculate ISR for Freelancers and Small Businesses
✅ Conclusion
Setting prices isn’t about guessing or copying competitors. It’s about knowing your numbers: your material costs, your fixed expenses, your break-even point, and your desired profit margin.
Remember:
- Calculate your material costs per unit accurately
- Include all fixed costs—they don’t disappear if you sell less
- Know your break-even point; it’s your minimum survival number
- Add a profit margin that allows you to grow
- Review and adjust as costs and markets change
A price that covers your costs and provides profit isn’t expensive—it’s sustainable. Anything less puts your business at risk.
Know your costs. Set your price. Protect your business.
