Wholesale Markup Calculator 2026
Calculate retail prices from wholesale cost, compare markup strategies, and find the exact markup percentage needed to hit your target profit margin.
Rent, software, subscriptions
Retail Price
$30.00
2.0x multiplier
Profit / Unit
$9.00
Profit Margin
30.0%
100% markup
Monthly Profit
$1,500.00
Price Breakdown
Markup Needed for Target Margins
At your wholesale cost of $15.00 with 10% platform fees:
| Target Margin | Markup Needed | Multiplier | Retail Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20% | 71.4% | 1.71x | $25.71 |
| 30% | 100.0% | 2.00x | $30.00 |
| 40% | 140.0% | 2.40x | $36.00 |
| 50% | 200.0% | 3.00x | $45.00 |
| 60% | 300.0% | 4.00x | $60.00 |
Markup vs. Margin: The Difference That Costs You Money
The most expensive confusion in retail is between markup and margin. They sound interchangeable, but they're calculated differently, and mixing them up leads to underpricing. Markup is the percentage you add to your cost. Margin is the percentage of the final price that's profit. A 50% markup does not give you a 50% margin — it gives you a 33.3% margin.
Here's why: if your wholesale cost is $20 and you apply a 50% markup, your retail price is $30. Your profit is $10 on a $30 sale — that's 33.3% margin ($10 / $30), not 50%. To achieve a 50% margin, you'd need a 100% markup (selling the $20 product at $40). This distinction matters enormously when you're targeting a specific profit percentage.
The conversion formulas: Markup % = (Retail - Cost) / Cost x 100. Margin % = (Retail - Cost) / Retail x 100. Or to convert directly: Margin = Markup / (1 + Markup), and Markup = Margin / (1 - Margin). Memorize these or use the calculator above — getting this wrong on thousands of products adds up to significant lost profit.
Industry Markup Standards
Every retail category has established markup norms. These exist because of the underlying cost structures — categories with high return rates, spoilage, or styling complexity need higher markups to remain profitable.
- Jewelry: 100-300% markup (2-4x wholesale cost). High perceived value, low COGS relative to retail price, and strong emotional purchase drivers support these markups.
- Clothing and apparel: 100-200% markup (2-3x). Needs to be high to absorb the 15-25% return rate typical in fashion. Seasonal markdowns also eat into full-price margins.
- Furniture and home decor: 200-400% markup (3-5x). High shipping costs, damage rates, and showroom overhead justify the markup. Online sellers can sometimes offer lower prices because they skip the showroom.
- Electronics: 20-50% markup (1.2-1.5x). Highly competitive, price-transparent category. Margins come from volume, accessories, and extended warranties rather than the core product.
- Cosmetics and beauty: 200-500% markup (3-6x). Low production costs, strong brand premiums, and repeat purchase behavior support high markups.
- Food and groceries: 10-30% markup (1.1-1.3x). Thin margins offset by extremely high volume and frequent purchase cycles. Perishability limits markup potential.
- Accessories (bags, watches, sunglasses): 100-300% markup (2-4x). Similar to jewelry — high perceived value relative to manufacturing cost.
These are starting points for brick-and-mortar retail. Ecommerce sellers often need to adjust because they face different cost structures — lower rent but higher advertising and shipping costs.
How Platform Fees Affect Your Real Markup
A 100% markup looks great until you subtract platform fees. The platform you sell on determines how much of your markup you actually keep.
Suppose you buy a product for $20 wholesale and sell it for $40 (100% markup, 50% gross margin). Here's your effective margin after platform fees:
- Shopify (2.9% + $0.30): Fees = $1.46. You keep $18.54 profit. Effective margin: 46.4%.
- Etsy (transaction + processing + listing): Fees = ~$4.45. You keep $15.55 profit. Effective margin: 38.9%.
- Amazon (15% referral): Fees = $6.00. You keep $14.00 profit. Effective margin: 35.0%.
- eBay (13.25% + $0.30): Fees = $5.60. You keep $14.40 profit. Effective margin: 36.0%.
The same product, same markup, same selling price — but your actual profit ranges from $14 to $18.54 depending on the platform. When setting your markup, factor in which platform you're selling on. Use our Platform Fee Comparison tool to see the full picture.
Pricing Strategies Beyond Cost-Plus
Wholesale markup (cost-plus pricing) is the most common approach, but it's not the only one. Smart sellers use multiple strategies depending on the product and market:
Cost-plus pricing: Start with wholesale cost, add a fixed markup percentage. Simple, predictable, ensures every product covers costs. The downside: it ignores what the market is willing to pay. You might be leaving money on the table — or pricing yourself out of the market.
Value-based pricing: Price based on the perceived value to the customer, not your cost. A product that costs $5 to make but solves a $200 problem can justifiably sell for $50-100. This works best for unique, differentiated, or problem-solving products where customers aren't directly comparing your cost to competitors.
Competitive pricing: Set prices relative to competitors. Useful in commoditized markets where customers can easily compare options. The risk: if everyone races to the bottom, no one profits. Differentiation through better branding, product quality, or customer experience is how you avoid this trap.
Psychological pricing: Pricing at $39.99 instead of $40 or $29 instead of $30. Small adjustments that exploit pricing psychology. Charm pricing (ending in .99 or .97) is proven to increase conversion for products under $100. For premium products, round numbers ($50, $100) can signal quality.
Bundle pricing: Sell multiple products together at a slight discount versus buying individually. Increases average order value, moves slow inventory, and makes price comparison harder for the buyer. A 10% bundle discount often increases total revenue by 20-30%.
Common Pricing Mistakes
- Confusing markup and margin: Thinking a 50% markup gives you 50% profit. It doesn't — it gives you 33%. Always calculate in margin terms if you're targeting a profit percentage.
- Ignoring platform fees in markup calculation: Setting a 100% markup and assuming 50% margin, when your actual margin is 35-46% after platform fees. Build fees into your markup formula from the start.
- Matching competitor prices without matching their costs: A competitor with better supplier pricing, more efficient operations, or different fixed cost structure can profitably sell at prices that would lose you money. Know your own numbers first.
- Applying uniform markup across all products: Different products have different price sensitivities, competitive landscapes, and cost structures. High-demand staple products might sell well at a 1.5x markup, while unique accessories can support 4x. Optimize per product, not per store.
- Forgetting shipping and handling: If you offer free shipping, the shipping cost reduces your effective markup. A $20 wholesale product sold at $40 with $6 "free shipping" has an effective markup of 54%, not 100%.
- Not testing prices: Many sellers pick a price and never change it. A/B testing different price points (even $2-5 differences) often reveals that a higher price converts similarly but generates significantly more profit per sale.
MAP Pricing and Your Markup Strategy
If you sell branded products with MAP (Minimum Advertised Price) restrictions, your pricing flexibility is limited on the downside — but that's actually a good thing. MAP prevents competitors from undercutting each other to the point where no one profits. It creates a price floor that protects your margin.
When evaluating wholesale products with MAP, compare the MAP price to your total cost (wholesale + shipping + fees). If the MAP provides a healthy margin after all costs, the product is a good candidate. If the MAP barely covers your costs, it's not worth carrying — you can't sell above MAP (market won't bear it) and can't advertise below it.