Profit margin by industry: 2026 benchmarks
The 'good profit margin' question only makes sense in context. Here's what the data says across 13 industries — median, range, and top-quartile.
The short answer
Net profit margin varies wildly by industry — from 1–3% for grocery stores to 25–35% for established SaaS. The "good margin" question only makes sense in context of your specific sector. Here's what the data shows across the most-asked-about industries in 2026.
Net profit margin by industry (2026)
| Industry | Net margin range | Median | Top quartile |
|---|---|---|---|
| SaaS (mature) | 20–35% | 25% | 35%+ |
| SaaS (growth-stage) | -30% to +10% | -5% | 10%+ |
| Pharmaceuticals | 15–25% | 20% | 30%+ |
| Financial services | 12–25% | 18% | 30%+ |
| Professional services | 15–35% | 20% | 35%+ |
| Construction (specialty) | 5–12% | 7% | 15%+ |
| Manufacturing | 5–10% | 7% | 12%+ |
| Ecommerce (DTC) | 5–15% | 10% | 20%+ |
| Retail (specialty) | 2–8% | 4% | 10%+ |
| Restaurants (full-service) | 3–9% | 5% | 10%+ |
| Restaurants (QSR/fast-casual) | 5–12% | 8% | 14%+ |
| Grocery | 1–3% | 2% | 4%+ |
| Trucking / logistics | 2–6% | 4% | 8%+ |
Why margins differ so much
Three structural forces explain almost every difference you see in the table above.
1. Marginal cost of one more unit
SaaS sells software once and delivers it a million times for almost no incremental cost. A grocery store sells perishable goods that must be replaced unit-by-unit. The closer your marginal cost gets to zero, the higher your structural margin ceiling.
2. Competition and switching costs
Industries with low barriers to entry (restaurants, retail) drive margins to commodity levels — anyone can open a coffee shop, so coffee shop margins compress. Industries with regulatory moats (pharma, financial services), high switching costs (enterprise software), or proprietary technology sustain higher margins because the field of competitors is naturally limited.
3. Capital intensity vs. labor intensity
Capital-intensive industries (manufacturing, airlines) need large fixed assets, so they compete on volume and operate on thinner margins. Labor-light industries (consulting, software) can scale revenue without scaling cost base proportionally.
Gross vs net margin: which to compare?
Always compare like-for-like. SaaS gross margins look enormous (75–85%) but net margins for growth-stage SaaS are often negative because of heavy sales and marketing spend. Restaurant gross margins on food can be 70%+ but labor and rent eat most of it before net.
For benchmarking against industry peers:
- Gross margin tells you whether your unit economics work — whether the thing you sell makes money after the direct cost of selling it.
- Operating margin tells you whether the business model works at your current cost structure.
- Net margin tells you what's actually left for owners after everything, including taxes and interest.
How to use these benchmarks
If you're below the median for your industry, you have a structural problem — fix it before scaling. If you're at the median, scaling will compound the same margin you have today. If you're in the top quartile, you have pricing power or a cost advantage; protect it carefully.
Use our free margin calculator to plug in your numbers and see where you sit, then compare to the table above to see how far you are from your industry's top performers.
Frequently asked
What's the highest-margin small business?
Software/SaaS and professional services (accounting, legal, consulting) consistently top the list, often netting 25%+ in mature, well-run firms. Specialty trades with technical skill barriers (electrical, plumbing) also reach 15–25% net.
What's the lowest-margin small business?
Grocery and convenience stores typically run 1–3% net. Restaurants, especially full-service, run 3–5% net. These businesses survive on volume and turnover, not margin.
What's a "good" profit margin for any business?
10% net is generally considered healthy across most industries. 20%+ is excellent. Below 5% net is fragile — one bad quarter can flip you negative.