What is a good profit margin? Industry benchmarks by sector

A useful answer depends on your industry, your stage, and which margin you mean. Here are the real numbers from each major sector — and the thresholds that separate healthy from concerning.

The honest answer: it depends

"What's a good profit margin?" is one of the most-googled small business questions, and the most common answer — some variant of "around 10%" — is almost always wrong for the person asking. The right number depends on your industry, your business model, and which margin you're measuring (gross, contribution, or net).

Here are the real benchmarks, by category, based on industry surveys and public company filings.

Net margin by industry

Net margin — what's left after every expense including taxes — is the truest measure of profitability. The ranges below are typical for healthy businesses in each sector.

IndustryTypical net marginNotes
Software / SaaS10-30%Best-in-class can hit 40%+
Retail (general)2-5%Volume business; thin margins
Restaurants3-9%Bars and beverage-heavy do better
Ecommerce5-15%Wildly dependent on fees + ads
Construction5-15%Specialty trades higher than GCs
Professional services15-25%Lawyers, consultants, accounting
Manufacturing5-10%Lower for commoditized goods
Healthcare services10-15%Specialty practices higher
Auto repair5-10%Parts margins higher than labor
Real estate15-25%Commission-based; high variance

What "good" means at different stages

Stage matters as much as industry. A single-digit margin can be perfectly healthy at one stage and a warning sign at another.

A useful sanity check
If your net margin is below your country's small-business tax rate, you're working harder than you would as an employee. Either the business isn't ready to be your primary income, or the pricing/cost structure needs fixing.

Gross margin benchmarks (the higher number)

Gross margin subtracts only direct cost of goods. It's what people usually quote when they say "we run 50% margins" — but it doesn't include rent, payroll, ads, or anything else.

IndustryGross margin range
SaaS70-85%
Boutique apparel55-70%
Restaurant (food)65-75%
Mass retail30-50%
Grocery20-30%
Auto dealership10-15%

How to actually improve your margin

If your margin is below industry average, three levers move it, in order of leverage:

  1. Raise prices. A 5% price increase usually flows almost entirely to net margin. Most small businesses raise prices too rarely and too little. Customers tolerate annual increases more than they tolerate a single big one.
  2. Cut variable costs. Renegotiate supplier contracts annually. Audit payment processing fees — there's usually 0.5-1% recoverable. Reduce returns and waste.
  3. Cut fixed costs. Lowest leverage but easiest to control. Subscription audits, vendor consolidation, real-estate right-sizing.

The bottom line

"Good" depends on what you're benchmarking. Compare your net margin to your industry's range above. If you're in the lower half, you have room to grow margin via pricing and cost work. If you're in the upper half, focus on growing volume — your unit economics are working.

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