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Break-Even Calculator

Know your number. Enter your monthly overhead, owner's salary, and average job economics to see exactly how much revenue you need to break even — and how many jobs that takes.

Monthly Fixed Costs

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Total Monthly Nut$0

Average Job Economics

Materials + labor + subs (before overhead)

Common Contractor Overhead Expenses

ExpenseTypical RangeNotes
Shop / Office Rent$500-$3,000Includes storage, yard
Vehicle Payments$500-$2,000Truck(s), trailer, fuel
Insurance$300-$1,500GL, auto, umbrella, bonding
Tools & Equipment$200-$800Replacement, maintenance, leases
Marketing$200-$2,000Website, ads, yard signs, referral bonuses
Phone / Software$100-$500CRM, estimating, accounting software
Office / Admin Staff$0-$5,000Bookkeeper, admin, dispatcher

FAQ

What is a break-even analysis?

A break-even analysis tells you the minimum revenue needed to cover all your costs — both fixed overhead (rent, insurance, trucks) and variable costs (materials, labor per job). Below break-even you're losing money; above it, you're profitable. Every contractor should know their monthly break-even number.

What's a healthy gross margin for contractors?

Most successful contractors target 35-50% gross margin (revenue minus direct job costs, before overhead). General contractors typically see 25-35%, while specialty trades like electrical and plumbing can achieve 40-55%. If your margin is below 25%, you're likely not charging enough.

How do I lower my break-even point?

You can lower your break-even by: (1) increasing your gross margin by charging more or reducing job costs, (2) cutting fixed overhead expenses, or (3) both. Even a 5% improvement in margin can dramatically reduce how many jobs you need per month.

Price every job to cover overhead and generate profit

Contractor Co-Pilot builds overhead and profit margins into every estimate automatically.

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