Operating expense ratio (OER): the percentage of every euro that goes to running the shop.
Operating expense ratio is the share of revenue swallowed by operating costs — the cleanest single number to tell you whether your cost base is sized for the revenue you actually produce.
Operating expense ratio (OER) is the share of revenue consumed by the costs of running the business — everything below COGS but above interest and tax. Formula: OER = Operating expenses ÷ Revenue. It is the cleanest single signal for whether your cost base is sized correctly for the revenue you actually produce. An OER drifting upward over six months tells you costs grew while revenue did not — long before EBIT collapses to make the point obvious. nouz tracks fixed and variable operating costs against daily revenue so the ratio is current, not a quarter behind.
TL;DR
Definition, in shop-owner English
Operating expenses (often shortened to "opex") are the costs of running the business that are not the direct cost of what you sold. Rent, payroll, utilities, software, insurance, marketing, accountant fees, bank charges, owner salary. They are everything between gross profit and operating profit (EBIT) on the P&L.
OER expresses that whole block as a percentage of revenue. If your opex is €11.000/month and revenue is €20.000/month, your OER is 55%. Every euro of revenue funds €0,55 of operating costs — leaving €0,45 to cover COGS and contribute to EBIT.
OER is the inverse view of operating margin. If gross margin is 70% and OER is 55%, operating margin is 70% − 55% = 15%. The two ratios describe the same P&L from opposite sides — one is "what you keep after COGS," the other is "what you spend after COGS."
The formula and a worked example
OER % = Operating expenses / Net revenue × 100
Operating expenses = Rent + Payroll (incl. owner) + Utilities + Software
+ Marketing + Insurance + Professional fees + Misc
A Vienna boutique. Monthly net revenue €18.400 (after VAT and card fees). Operating costs broken out below.
| Line | Monthly cost | Share of opex |
|---|---|---|
| Rent | €2.800 | 36% |
| Payroll (1 part-time staff) | €1.600 | 21% |
| Owner salary (at market rate) | €2.400 | 31% |
| Utilities | €280 | 4% |
| Software (POS, accounting, design) | €140 | 2% |
| Marketing | €350 | 5% |
| Insurance + professional fees | €110 | 1% |
| Total operating expenses | €7.680 | 100% |
| OER | 7.680 / 18.400 | 41,7% |
OER of 41,7% for a boutique sits in the healthy band (35-45%). Rent is the largest single line at 36% of opex — which means a 10% rent rise next year would lift OER by roughly 1,5 percentage points. That is the kind of input that pricing and cost decisions should be modelled against, not absorbed by hope.
Healthy bands by sector
| Sector | Healthy OER band | Largest opex line typically |
|---|---|---|
| Cafe (single location) | 55 - 65% | Payroll (35-45% of revenue alone) |
| Restaurant | 50 - 58% | Payroll, then rent |
| Boutique retail | 35 - 45% | Rent, then payroll |
| Salon | 60 - 70% | Payroll / stylist commission |
| Small e-commerce | 30 - 45% | Marketing, then shipping-out (if not in COGS) |
| Service / consulting solo | 20 - 35% | Owner draw, then software |
A cafe with OER above 70% is usually overstaffed for the revenue. A boutique with OER above 50% usually has a rent problem — either the lease is too rich for the location, or the location is not producing the foot traffic it should. A salon with OER above 75% has either underutilized stylists or commission structures that lifted with raises but did not get rolled back when revenue softened.
The most useful comparison is not against the sector average — it is against your own last 12 months. An OER that has drifted from 58% to 62% over six months while revenue stayed flat means costs grew by roughly 7% with no corresponding revenue. That gap is the next 4 percentage points of operating margin you lost.
Why it matters for daily P&L
OER is the diagnostic that splits "cost problem" from "revenue problem" when EBIT is sliding. Two cafes with falling EBIT can look identical. The one with stable OER has a revenue problem (gross margin or volume is down). The one with rising OER has a cost problem (opex grew faster than revenue). Same EBIT slide, two different fixes — and OER tells you which.
It is also the cleanest place to spot creeping cost lines. A €30/month software subscription that nobody uses, a €120/month phone plan that is double what it needs to be, a marketing channel that stopped converting six months ago. Individually they barely move the needle. Together they add 2-3 points to OER over a year. OER tracked monthly catches the creep while it is still small.
For the cost-mechanics layer, see what fixed costs actually mean and fixed vs variable costs. For the connection to operating margin, see EBIT explained.
Related concepts
- What fixed costs actually mean — the big chunk of opex.
- Fixed vs variable costs — how opex splits internally.
- EBIT explained — what is left after OER is paid out of gross profit.
- Gross margin — the top-of-funnel partner ratio.
FAQ
What is the operating expense ratio?
OER is the share of revenue consumed by operating expenses — everything below COGS, above interest and tax. Formula: OER = Operating expenses / Revenue. A 50% OER means half of every euro of revenue funds the cost of running the shop; the other half is left to cover COGS and contribute to operating profit.
What is a good operating expense ratio for a small business?
Depends on the sector. Cafe: 55-65%. Restaurant: 50-58%. Boutique retail: 35-45%. Salon: 60-70%. E-commerce: 30-45%. Service / consulting solo: 20-35%. The most useful comparison is not the sector average — it is your own ratio over the last 12 months, watching for upward drift.
Does OER include cost of goods sold?
No. OER is operating expenses only — rent, payroll, utilities, software, marketing, insurance, owner salary. COGS sits above operating expenses on the P&L; it is the direct cost of what you sold. The full cost ratio (COGS + opex) / revenue is a separate calculation; OER intentionally isolates the cost of running the shop from the cost of what you sold.
Why is my OER rising even though revenue is steady?
Costs grew while revenue did not. Common drivers: a rent rise that flowed through, a salary increase, software subscriptions added but not removed, a marketing channel still being paid for that stopped converting. OER tracked monthly catches this drift — usually it is three or four small lines, not one big one. Tighten each by 5-10% and the ratio comes back into the healthy band.