COGS Per Unit: Calculate Your Accurate Profit | Per Unit Analysis
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COGS Per Unit: Calculate Your Accurate Profit

Per Unit Analysis - Break down COGS on a per-unit basis for accurate profit calculations

Why Per-Unit COGS Analysis Matters

Understanding your COGS per unit is one of the most powerful profitability tools available to online sellers. While many sellers track total revenue and total costs, analyzing profitability on a per-unit basis reveals critical insights: which products are truly profitable, which are losing money, and where to focus optimization efforts. Without per-unit analysis, you might be unknowingly subsidizing loss-making products with profits from winners—a dangerous blind spot for any business.

For Shopify stores, Amazon sellers, and multi-product online businesses, per-unit COGS analysis enables data-driven pricing decisions, product mix optimization, and inventory management. You can answer critical questions: Should I raise the price on Product A? Should I discontinue Product B? Which suppliers offer the best cost structure? This comprehensive guide provides the formulas, methods, and real-world examples you need to implement per-unit COGS analysis in your business.

Key Insight: Per-unit COGS analysis often reveals that 20% of products generate 80% of profits while another 20% create losses. Focusing on the winners and optimizing the losers can dramatically improve overall profitability without increasing sales volume.

Understanding COGS Per Unit Fundamentals

COGS per unit is the cost to acquire or produce a single unit of your product. Unlike total COGS (which rolls up all costs), per-unit COGS isolates the cost for each individual item. This enables accurate profit calculation at the product level and reveals which items drive your business forward.

The Basic COGS Per Unit Formula

COGS Per Unit = Total COGS ÷ Total Units Sold

However, this simple formula works only when all units cost the same to produce. For businesses with varying product costs, you must calculate COGS per unit for each product individually. Let's break this down:

Components of COGS Per Unit

Product Purchase Price: What you paid your supplier for the product (unit cost from invoice)

Inbound Shipping Per Unit: Freight cost divided by number of units in the shipment

Tariffs and Duties Per Unit: Import costs allocated across the shipment (if applicable)

Packaging Per Unit: Cost of boxes, tissue, labels, filler material per unit

Landed Cost Per Unit: All of the above combined = what it actually cost you to have the product ready to sell

Calculating COGS Per Unit: Step-by-Step Process

Method 1: Simple Product (Single Supplier, Consistent Cost)

Step 1: Gather your supplier invoice showing unit price and quantity purchased

Step 2: Calculate total landed cost: Product price + inbound shipping + tariffs + packaging for entire order

Step 3: Divide total landed cost by number of units: Landed Cost ÷ Units = COGS Per Unit

Example: You purchase 500 units at $8 per unit = $4,000. Shipping is $500. Tariff is $200. Packaging is $300. Total landed cost = $5,000. COGS per unit = $5,000 ÷ 500 = $10 per unit.

Method 2: Multiple Shipments of Same Product

Many sellers receive multiple shipments at different prices due to supplier cost changes or bulk purchase discounts. To calculate accurate average COGS per unit:

  • Calculate landed cost for each shipment separately
  • Add all landed costs together
  • Divide by total units across all shipments

Example: Shipment 1: 500 units at $8 each, landed cost $10 per unit. Shipment 2: 300 units at $7 each, landed cost $9 per unit. Weighted average: (500 × $10) + (300 × $9) = $5,000 + $2,700 = $7,700 total. $7,700 ÷ 800 units = $9.625 average per unit.

Method 3: Inventory Costing Methods (FIFO vs. Weighted Average)

When you sell products purchased at different times with varying costs, your COGS per unit depends on which inventory method you use:

FIFO (First In, First Out): Assumes oldest inventory sells first. COGS reflects older (often lower) prices. Better in inflationary environments, results in lower COGS and higher profit reporting.

Weighted Average: Calculates average cost across all units in inventory. Smooths out price fluctuations. Most straightforward for multi-shipment products.

LIFO (Last In, First Out): Assumes newest inventory sells first. COGS reflects newer (often higher) prices. Less common for online sellers but available.

MethodCOGS Per Unit CalculationWhen to UseImpact on Profit
FIFOUses cost of oldest units firstWhen supplier prices are rising, want lower COGSHigher profit reported
Weighted Average(Sum of all unit costs) ÷ Total unitsMost common for ecommerce, smooths fluctuationsMiddle-ground profit
LIFOUses cost of newest units firstWhen supplier prices are rising, want higher COGS (tax benefits)Lower profit reported
Specific IDTracks actual cost of specific units soldHigh-value items, can match actual sales to actual costsMost accurate representation

From COGS Per Unit to Profit Per Unit

Once you've calculated COGS per unit, determining profit per unit requires accounting for all other costs associated with selling:

Profit Per Unit = Sale Price − COGS Per Unit − Fees Per Unit − Other Costs Per Unit

Complete Profit Per Unit Breakdown

Sale Price: What customer pays (retail price)

COGS Per Unit: Your cost to acquire/make the product (calculated above)

Platform Fees Per Unit: Etsy transaction fees (6.5%), Amazon referral fees (8-15%), payment processing (2.9% + $0.30), etc. Varies by platform.

Fulfillment Per Unit: Cost to package and ship to customer (USPS/UPS/FedEx rates)

Returns/Refunds Allowance: Expected percentage of refunded sales (industry average 2-5%)

Marketing Allocation Per Unit: Your marketing spend ÷ units sold (reveals true profitability after acquisition cost)

Net Profit Per Unit: What remains after all costs

Real-World Example: Complete Per-Unit Profit Analysis

Product: Wireless Earpbuds sold on Amazon

Sale Price: $49.99

ItemCost Per UnitNotes
Sale Price$49.99Retail price customer pays
COGS:
Product purchase($14.00)Supplier unit price
Shipping per unit($1.50)$4,000 freight ÷ 2,667 units
Tariff per unit($0.75)$2,000 total ÷ 2,667 units
Packaging($1.25)Box, packing, labels
Total COGS Per Unit($17.50)
Fees & Costs:
Amazon referral fee($4.50)9% of sale price
FBA fulfillment($3.48)Amazon standard rate
Payment processing($1.60)3% + $0.30
Returns allowance($0.50)1% historical return rate
Marketing allocation($4.00)Allocated ad spend
NET PROFIT PER UNIT$17.4134.8% profit margin

Using Per-Unit Analysis for Product Mix Optimization

Once you have per-unit COGS and profit data for all products, you can analyze which deserve your focus:

Segment Your Products

  • Stars: High profit margin, high volume - focus on maintaining consistency
  • Cash Cows: Solid profit, high volume - reliable business
  • Question Marks: Low volume, unproven - test and decide
  • Dogs: Low profit, low volume - consider discontinuing

Margin vs. Volume Analysis

Not all profit comes from high margins. Sometimes low-margin, high-volume products are more valuable. Calculate contribution profit: (Profit Per Unit × Units Sold). This reveals true business drivers.

Common Per-Unit COGS Mistakes

Forgetting inbound shipping in COGS: Shipping costs are part of your landed cost and must be included in per-unit COGS.

Not updating COGS when supplier prices change: Recalculate quarterly or when receiving new shipments at different prices.

Using total revenue instead of net revenue for allocation: Always use net revenue (after refunds) when allocating costs per unit.

Ignoring packaging in COGS: Even 50-cent packaging adds up across thousands of units.

Treating seasonal products uniformly: Calculate seasonally if costs vary by season.

Tools for Per-Unit COGS Tracking

Use accounting software or spreadsheets to automate per-unit COGS tracking. Input supplier invoice data, and formulas automatically calculate landed costs. Our COGS Calculator provides quick calculations for individual shipments. For comprehensive analysis, use our COGS Template to track all products systematically.

COGS Per Unit Analysis Facts

20%

Percentage of products often generating 80% of profits

5

Components in complete COGS per unit calculation

4

Common inventory costing methods (FIFO, LIFO, WAC, Specific ID)

10-20%

Percentage of COGS often from inbound shipping and tariffs

2-5%

Average product return rate to account for in profitability

Quarterly

Recommended frequency to update COGS per product

Frequently Asked Questions About COGS Per Unit

How is COGS per unit different from average COGS?

COGS per unit isolates cost for a single product unit, while average COGS calculates the average across all products. Per-unit analysis reveals profitability by product; average COGS only shows company-wide cost structure. For accurate pricing and product decisions, always use per-unit COGS, not average.

Should I use FIFO or Weighted Average for COGS?

Most online sellers use Weighted Average because it smooths out price fluctuations across multiple shipments and is simpler to calculate. FIFO is better if supplier costs are rising and you want to match when old cheaper inventory sells first. Choose once and stay consistent—changing methods mid-year complicates accounting. Consult your accountant for the best choice for your business.

How do I allocate shipping and tariffs to per-unit COGS?

Calculate total shipping and tariffs for the shipment, then divide by number of units received. For example: $5,000 in fees ÷ 1,000 units = $5 per unit. Add this to your supplier unit price to get complete landed cost per unit. This ensures COGS accurately reflects what you paid to have inventory ready to sell.

Should packaging be included in COGS per unit?

Yes, packaging should be included in COGS per unit. Packaging is a direct product cost—you wouldn't have that cost without the product. Calculate packaging cost per unit by dividing total packaging spend by units packaged. Even 50 cents per unit adds 5 cents to COGS when allocated across thousands of units, impacting profitability significantly.

How do I calculate profit per unit with marketplace fees?

Subtract marketplace fees from sale price: Profit = Sale Price − COGS − Platform Fees − Fulfillment − Returns Allowance. For example: $50 sale − $15 COGS − $4.50 Amazon fees − $3.50 fulfillment − $0.50 returns = $26 profit per unit. Always include all fees in per-unit calculations for accurate profitability assessment.

What if I have multiple SKUs with the same product?

Use the same COGS per unit for all SKUs of the same product—they share the same supplier cost, shipping, and tariff allocation. However, if SKUs differ in size, color variations with different costs, or come from different suppliers, calculate COGS separately for each. This accuracy reveals which variants are most profitable.

How often should I update COGS per unit?

Update COGS per unit whenever you receive a new shipment at a different supplier price, or quarterly at minimum. Quarterly updates ensure accuracy during supplier price negotiations. For fast-moving businesses with frequent price changes, monthly updates prevent outdated cost data from skewing profitability calculations. More frequent updates = better decisions.

Can COGS per unit change mid-year?

Absolutely. COGS per unit changes whenever you purchase inventory at a different supplier price. If your supplier increases prices mid-year, your COGS per unit increases immediately for new inventory. Track this by shipment—use weighted average to blend costs across multiple shipments. Update your pricing strategy when COGS increases to maintain profit margins.