Compare calculators
Both calculators run independently β change the inputs on either side to compare results.
Inventory Turnover Calculator
Calculate how many times per year your business sells through its average inventory by dividing cost of goods sold by average inventory value. Use it to measure inventory efficiency, spot overstocking or slow movers, and benchmark against ecommerce or retail industry norms.
Break-Even Point Calculator
Calculate the number of units you must sell at a given price to cover all of your costs β the moment a business starts generating profit instead of losing money on each transaction. Enter your total fixed costs (rent, salaries, software, insurance), your variable cost per unit (raw materials, packaging, payment processing), and your selling price per unit, and the calculator returns the break-even quantity. This is one of the most important numbers in starting or pricing any product: it tells you whether the business model is even viable, how much volume you need, and how sensitive profitability is to price and cost changes.
Key differences
| Inventory Turnover Calculator | Break-Even Point Calculator | |
|---|---|---|
| Category | Ecommerce | Accounting |
| Inputs required | 2 | 3 |
| Result | Inventory Turnover Ratio (x) | Break-Even Point (units) |
| What it does | Calculate how many times per year your business sells through its average inventory by dividing cost of goods sold by average inventory value. Use it to measure inventory efficiency, spot overstocking or slow movers, and benchmark against ecommerce or retail industry norms. | Calculate the number of units you must sell at a given price to cover all of your costs β the moment a business starts generating profit instead of losing money on each transaction. Enter your total fixed costs (rent, salaries, software, insurance), your variable cost per unit (raw materials, packaging, payment processing), and your selling price per unit, and the calculator returns the break-even quantity. This is one of the most important numbers in starting or pricing any product: it tells you whether the business model is even viable, how much volume you need, and how sensitive profitability is to price and cost changes. |