Net margin: the bottom-line ratio that finally tells you what you kept.
Net margin is the share of revenue that survives every cost — COGS, operating expenses, interest, tax — and ends up in your bank account. It is the only number that answers "did the business actually make money this year?"
Net margin (also called net profit margin) is the share of revenue that survives every cost — COGS, operating expenses, interest, tax — and ends up in your pocket. Formula: Net profit ÷ Revenue. Healthy small-business net margin sits in the 8-15% band, varying by sector. It is the number that finally answers the question "did the business make money this year?" — and the one most small shops mis-quote because they confuse it with gross margin. nouz reports the line that maps to net margin honestly: EBIT, before tax and interest, computed on net revenue.
TL;DR
Definition, in shop-owner English
Walk down the P&L line by line. Start with revenue. Subtract COGS to get gross profit. Subtract operating expenses (rent, salaries, utilities, marketing, software) to get operating profit, also called EBIT. Subtract interest on loans. Subtract corporate tax. What is left is net profit. Divide that by revenue and you have net margin.
Net margin is the harshest of the three margins. Gross margin only flexes around COGS. Operating margin includes operating costs. Net margin includes everything — even things you do not fully control, like interest rates and corporate tax. Two shops with identical revenue and identical operations can have very different net margins because one is loan-financed and the other is not.
For most small-shop owners running daily, EBIT (operating profit) is the more useful number because it strips out tax timing and loan structure. Net margin is the right number for a yearly review or a business sale. nouz tracks EBIT daily because it is the lever you actually move; net margin shows up in the annual accounts.
The formula and a worked example
Net profit = Revenue - COGS - Operating expenses - Interest - Tax
Net margin % = Net profit / Revenue × 100
A Munich cafe across a full year. €240.000 gross revenue, 19% VAT brings net revenue to roughly €201.681 after VAT and card fees.
| Line | Amount | Cumulative |
|---|---|---|
| Net revenue | €201.681 | €201.681 |
| Less COGS (28% of net) | −€56.471 | €145.210 gross profit |
| Less operating expenses | −€110.000 | €35.210 EBIT |
| Less interest on equipment loan | −€2.400 | €32.810 pre-tax |
| Less corporate tax (25%) | −€8.203 | €24.607 net profit |
| Gross margin | 145.210 / 201.681 | 72,0% |
| Operating margin (EBIT) | 35.210 / 201.681 | 17,5% |
| Net margin | 24.607 / 201.681 | 12,2% |
Three margins, one cafe. 72% gross margin says pricing is healthy. 17,5% operating margin says the cost base is sized for the revenue. 12,2% net margin says the cafe genuinely made €24.607 of after-tax profit. An owner who quotes "72% margin" at a dinner party is correct on gross. The number that paid for the holiday is 12,2%.
Healthy benchmarks by sector
| Sector | Healthy net margin band | What a low number signals |
|---|---|---|
| Cafe (owner-operated) | 8 - 14% | Below 5%: operating costs eating gross margin — usually rent, staffing, or owner taking too small a wage. |
| Restaurant | 5 - 10% | Below 3%: classic restaurant trap — fine gross margin, killed by labour and rent. |
| Boutique retail | 6 - 12% | Below 4%: too much markdown, or rent/payroll out of line with revenue. |
| Salon | 10 - 18% | Below 8%: under-utilized chairs, product cost drift, or commission structure. |
| Small e-commerce | 5 - 15% | Below 4%: ad spend running too hot or returns not in COGS. |
| Service / consulting solo | 15 - 30% | Below 12%: under-priced services or admin overhead too large for revenue. |
These bands assume the owner is taking a market-rate salary that sits in operating expenses. A "20% net margin" that comes from the owner paying themselves nothing is not a real 20% — it is a 5% net margin with €15.000 of unpaid owner work hidden in the gap.
Why it matters for daily P&L
Net margin is the answer to "did the year work?" — but it shows up too late to fix anything if you only see it once a year. The daily lever is EBIT (operating margin). Net margin is what EBIT becomes after interest and tax that you mostly cannot move month to month.
The pair of numbers to watch together: gross margin and net margin. If gross margin is healthy but net margin is thin, the problem is operating costs — the cost base is sized for a bigger business than yours actually is. If gross margin is sliding and net margin is sliding with it, the problem is upstream — pricing, supplier costs, product mix. Same low net margin, two completely different fixes.
For the operating layer in between, see operating margin vs net margin. For the daily lever, see EBIT explained.
Related concepts
- EBIT explained — operating profit, the daily lever above net margin.
- Gross margin — the top-of-funnel ratio.
- Operating margin vs net margin — what changes between the two.
- Gross vs net revenue — the denominator question.
FAQ
What is a good net profit margin for a small business?
For most small shops, 8-15% is the healthy band. Below 5% is fragile — one bad month wipes out the year. Salons often run higher (10-18%) because services carry high gross margin; restaurants run lower (5-10%) because labour and rent eat into operating profit even when food cost is well-managed.
Is net margin the same as gross margin?
No. Gross margin = (Revenue − COGS) / Revenue and only accounts for the cost of what you sold. Net margin = Net profit / Revenue and accounts for every cost, including operating expenses, interest, and tax. A shop with 70% gross margin can easily end up with 8% net margin once operating costs are paid.
Should net margin be computed on gross or net revenue?
Net revenue. VAT and card fees never were yours, so including them in the denominator inflates the ratio. The number that matches your bank account uses net revenue at the top and net profit at the bottom — both stripped of the money that was always going to leave.
Why does nouz show EBIT instead of net profit?
EBIT is the daily lever — the part of profit you actually move with pricing, cost, and mix decisions. Interest and tax sit below EBIT and mostly cannot be moved month to month. Showing EBIT daily keeps the dashboard pointed at the things you can actually act on. Net profit is the right number for the annual review; EBIT is the right number for the daily close.