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Operating margin measures how much profit a company earns from core operations. This guide explains the formula and how to interpret results.
Operating margin is a profitability ratio that measures how much profit a company makes from its core operations for every dollar of revenue. It indicates how efficiently a business controls operating costs relative to sales.
Operating margin represents the percentage of revenue that remains after covering operating expenses such as cost of goods sold (COGS), salaries, rent, utilities, and administrative costs. It excludes interest, taxes, and non-operating items.
Definition
Operating margin is the ratio of operating income to net sales, showing the proportion of revenue converted into operating profit.
Operating margin highlights the health of a company’s core operations. It reflects how well management controls production, pricing, and overhead expenses.
A high operating margin suggests:
A low margin may signal cost inefficiencies, pricing pressure, or operational challenges.
Operating margins vary widely by industry. For example, software companies often have high margins due to low variable costs, while retail and manufacturing sectors typically have lower margins.
Operating Margin = (Operating Income ÷ Net Sales) × 100
Where:
A company earns $4,000,000 in operating income on $20,000,000 in sales:
Operating Margin = (4,000,000 ÷ 20,000,000) × 100 = 20%
This means the company retains $0.20 in operating profit for every dollar of revenue.
Operating margin is essential because it:
Lenders and investors closely monitor operating margin when assessing risk.
Operating Profit Margin: Another term for operating margin.
EBIT Margin: Equivalent metric using EBIT.
Adjusted Operating Margin: Excludes one-time items for clearer analysis.
It depends on the industry. High-tech and software firms often exceed 20%, while retail may operate at 5–10%.
By reducing costs, increasing prices, improving efficiency, or shifting to higher-margin products.
No. Net margin includes interest, taxes, and non-operating items; operating margin does not.