SSmallBizCalc

Commercial guide

Bookkeeping categories that make pricing easier

Pricing gets harder when every cost lives in one mental bucket. A small business owner can usually make a better quote by separating direct materials, direct labor, fixed overhead, variable payment fees, and target net profit before choosing a price.

Bookkeeping matters because the calculator is only as good as the inputs. Rent, insurance, software, licenses, repairs, merchant fees, packaging, and owner labor should not be guessed once sales become repeatable.

Pricing Categories to Pull From Bookkeeping

The goal is to turn messy expenses into calculator inputs. You do not need perfect books to start, but each cost should land in a category that explains how it affects price.

Category Examples Calculator input
Direct materials Inventory, ingredients, parts, packaging, job supplies Materials or product cost
Direct labor Owner time, staff wages, subcontractors, prep, delivery Labor cost per order
Fixed overhead Rent, software, insurance, licenses, phone, bookkeeping Monthly fixed overhead
Variable fees Card processing, marketplace fees, booking fees, refunds Taxes and processing fees

Monthly Pricing Review

A practical monthly review is simple: export expenses, group them into pricing categories, divide fixed overhead by realistic monthly order volume, and compare quoted net profit with actual profit after the work is done.

If a quote assumes $1,200 in monthly overhead and 40 monthly orders, each order carries $30 in overhead. If bookkeeping later shows overhead is really $1,800, the same volume requires $45 per order before fees and target profit. That difference can quietly erase margin.

Example

Suppose bookkeeping shows $38 in materials, $42 in labor, $1,200 in monthly overhead, 40 expected orders, and 8% payment and tax-related fees. The calculator can turn those categories into a suggested price and show whether the target margin survives after overhead and fees.

If the result shows thin margin or high overhead per order, the next step is operational: clean up the cost categories, review fixed commitments, or adjust scope before cutting price.

If the calculator shows a thin margin or high overhead per order, clean bookkeeping is the next operational step before cutting prices.

Run a quote with your bookkeeping numbers

Quick FAQ

Do I need bookkeeping software to use the calculator?

No. You can start with a spreadsheet or monthly expense export. Software becomes more useful once repeat sales make cost categories worth tracking consistently.

Should owner time be in bookkeeping categories?

Yes for pricing. Even if owner draws are handled separately, owner labor and admin time should be estimated when deciding whether a quote is profitable.

What data is sent if I click a partner link?

The site tracks low-sensitivity events such as campaign and offer category. Calculator cost, price, profit, and volume inputs are not sent remotely by event tracking. See the affiliate disclosure for details.