Tax-aware pricing tool

Sales Tax / GST Margin Helper

See your real profit margin after GST or sales tax, and work out what you need to charge to hit your target margin.

Educational guidance

This calculator is an educational tool based on standard sales tax and GST/VAT margin formulas. It does not replace advice from a qualified accountant or tax professional. Always confirm tax treatment and rates for your jurisdiction before making pricing decisions.

If you are not registered to collect GST/VAT or sales tax, tax may behave more like a cost than a pass-through. Talk to your accountant about how to handle this in your pricing.

Calculator

Strip tax out of the price before judging the margin

Calculation mode

Shared tax setup

Currency is display only. It does not convert values; it only controls how money is shown in the results.

Editable even after choosing a preset.

Tax region preset

Tax mode

Find price for target margin

Use this when you know the cost and margin goal, and want the right selling price after accounting for tax treatment.

Target type

Margin is calculated on revenue before tax.

Results

Target price after tax at a glance

Required selling price

A$36.99

Customer-facing price with tax included.

Required net price

A$33.63

Tax amount per unit

A$3.36

Gross profit per unit

A$13.63

True margin

40.5%

Markup

68.1%

Customer pays per unit

A$36.99

Tax impact

At this target price, tax is A$3.36 per unit. Margin is still calculated on net revenue before tax, which is why tax-aware pricing can differ from a quick markup-only estimate.

Exact price before rounding: A$36.67. Rounded price used in the results: A$36.99.

Breakdown

How the required price is built

Exact price before rounding

A$36.67

Required selling price

A$36.99

Required net price before tax

A$33.63

Tax amount per unit

A$3.36

Customer pays per unit

A$36.99

Gross profit per unit

A$13.63

True margin

40.5%

Markup

68.1%

How this is calculated

How your current tax-aware margin numbers are calculated

This walkthrough updates live from the form so you can see how tax is stripped out, how true margin is measured on revenue before tax, and how target pricing is solved.

Open the live calculation walkthroughUses your current tax setup, price, and target inputs.
Input
Current inputs: cost per unit = A$20.00, target type = margin, target value = 40.0%, tax rate = 10.0%, tax mode = price includes tax, rounding = ninety_nine.
Formula
Exact net price = cost per unit / 1 - target margin (40.0%) = A$20.00 / 0.600 = A$33.33.
Formula
Exact selling price = exact net price x 1 + tax rate (10.0%) = A$33.33 x 1.100 = A$36.67.
Result
Rounded selling price = exact selling price adjusted by the selected rounding rule = A$36.67 adjusted to A$36.99.
Result
Required net price after rounding = required selling price / 1 + tax rate (10.0%) = A$36.99 / 1.100 = A$33.63.
Result
Gross profit per unit = net revenue per unit - cost per unit = A$33.63 - A$20.00 = A$13.63.
Result
True margin = gross profit per unit / net revenue per unit = A$13.63 / A$33.63 = 40.5%.
Meaning
In plain English: the target-price mode solves the pre-tax revenue needed to hit your chosen margin or markup, then applies tax treatment and rounding so the final customer-facing price still supports the business more realistically.
Meaning
Margin should be judged on revenue before tax. In tax-inclusive systems, that means tax must be removed from the shown price first; in tax-on-top systems, margin is usually measured on the selling price before the separate checkout tax is added.

How it works

What this tax-aware pricing helper is helping you see

The goal is not only to produce a number. It is to separate tax from revenue, explain the difference between margin and markup, and show how much profit the business actually keeps.

Inclusive vs on-top tax

When the price includes GST or VAT, part of the displayed price is tax that the business does not keep as revenue. When tax is added on top, the listed price usually stays closer to the revenue base used for margin.

Why true margin uses revenue before tax

True margin should be measured against net revenue before tax because pass-through tax is not part of the business's real takings. Using the tax-inclusive price can make margin look healthier than it is.

How target margin and markup differ

Margin measures profit as a share of revenue, while markup measures profit as a share of cost. They are related, but they answer different pricing questions and produce different percentages.

How tax changes target pricing

Tax does not replace pricing logic. You still solve for the net price needed to support the target margin or markup, then layer tax treatment on top so the final customer-facing price remains realistic.

FAQ

Common questions

Short answers to the tax-aware pricing and margin questions makers, Etsy sellers, and small brands ask most often.

What is the difference between margin and markup?

Margin is profit divided by revenue, while markup is profit divided by cost. They are related, but they are not interchangeable and they produce different percentages.

Why does my margin change when I include GST or sales tax?

Tax changes margin when the displayed selling price includes tax because part of that price is tax you do not keep as revenue. The margin should be measured on revenue before tax, not on the tax-inclusive amount.

Should I calculate margin on prices including or excluding tax?

In most tax-registered setups, margin should be calculated on revenue excluding tax because GST, VAT, or sales tax is generally a pass-through amount rather than part of the business's real revenue.

How do I find the right price for a target margin after GST?

Start with cost, solve for the net price needed to reach the target margin before tax, then add tax if your customer-facing price includes GST or VAT. That gives you a more realistic selling price target.

How do I use this tool if tax is added on top, like US sales tax?

Use the `Tax added on top` mode. In that setup, the selling price before tax is usually the revenue base for margin, and the tax amount is shown separately as a checkout add-on.

Does this tool replace advice from my accountant?

No. This helper uses standard educational formulas for tax-aware pricing and margin analysis, but it does not replace jurisdiction-specific advice from a qualified accountant or tax professional.

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