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Operating Margin

Operating margin is the percentage of revenue left after subtracting all operating expenses — cost of goods sold, SG&A, R&D, depreciation, and amortization. It measures how much profit the core business generates from each dollar of sales before interest and taxes.

Why Operating Margin Matters

If gross margin tells you whether a company’s product economics work, operating margin tells you whether the entire business works. It captures everything management can control — production costs, headcount, marketing spend, research budgets — and rolls it into a single percentage.

A company with a fat gross margin but a thin operating margin is spending too much to run the business. A company with a modest gross margin but a strong operating margin has figured out how to run lean. That distinction matters enormously when you’re picking between competitors in the same industry.

Operating Margin Formula

Operating Margin Operating Margin = Operating Income ÷ Revenue × 100

Operating income — also called EBIT in most contexts — sits on the income statement below gross profit and above interest expense. It’s what remains after all operating costs have been deducted but before the company pays lenders or the tax authority.

How to Calculate Operating Margin — Example

Line ItemAmount
Revenue$1,200,000
Cost of Goods Sold$480,000
Gross Profit$720,000
SG&A Expenses$300,000
R&D Expenses$100,000
Depreciation & Amortization$60,000
Operating Income$260,000
Calculation Operating Margin = $260,000 ÷ $1,200,000 × 100 = 21.7%

The company keeps nearly 22 cents of every revenue dollar after paying for everything it takes to run the business — but before servicing debt or paying taxes.

Operating Margin by Industry

Operating margins vary dramatically by sector. Capital-light, high-pricing-power businesses sit at the top; commodity and service businesses cluster at the bottom.

IndustryTypical Operating Margin
Software / SaaS20–35%
Pharmaceuticals20–30%
Financial Services25–40%
Consumer Staples10–18%
Industrial Manufacturing8–15%
Grocery Retail2–5%
Airlines5–12%

A 10% operating margin at a grocery chain signals exceptional execution. That same margin at a SaaS company would raise serious questions about cost discipline.

The Margin Waterfall: Gross → Operating → Net

Operating margin sits in the middle of the profitability stack. Understanding where dollars leak between each layer is one of the most useful exercises in fundamental analysis.

MarginWhat It CapturesWhat It Misses
Gross MarginProduct-level economics (Revenue − COGS)All operating expenses, interest, taxes
Operating MarginFull operational efficiencyInterest costs, taxes
Net MarginBottom-line profitability after everythingNothing — it’s the final number

The gap between gross margin and operating margin reveals operating expense intensity. If a company has a 60% gross margin but only a 15% operating margin, 45 cents of every revenue dollar is going to SG&A, R&D, and depreciation. That’s not inherently bad — growth-stage companies often invest heavily here — but it needs to be shrinking over time for the unit economics to make sense.

Operating Leverage: Why Operating Margin Expands

Operating leverage is the mechanism that makes operating margins expand as revenue grows. Many operating costs — rent, salaries, software licenses — are relatively fixed. As revenue scales, those fixed costs get spread across a larger base, and the operating margin widens.

This is why high-growth companies often guide to future margin expansion. They’re betting that revenue growth will outpace operating cost growth. When it works, it’s powerful. When revenue stalls and fixed costs stay high, operating margin compresses fast.

Analyst Tip
To spot operating leverage, compare the year-over-year change in revenue to the year-over-year change in operating income. If operating income is growing faster than revenue, the company has positive operating leverage. If it’s growing slower, the business is getting less efficient — a red flag even if both numbers are going up.

Limitations of Operating Margin

Operating margin is blind to two important realities. First, it ignores capital structure — a company drowning in debt might show a healthy operating margin but have almost nothing left after interest payments. That’s where the interest coverage ratio and net margin step in.

Second, operating margin is an accrual metric, not a cash metric. Depreciation charges reduce operating income but don’t represent an actual cash outflow in the period. To understand real cash generation, you need operating cash flow or free cash flow.

Watch Out
One-time items like restructuring charges, legal settlements, or asset impairments can crush operating margin in a single quarter. Always look at adjusted operating margin (excluding non-recurring items) alongside the reported number to separate noise from trend.

Key Takeaways

  • Operating margin = Operating Income ÷ Revenue. It captures the full cost of running the business.
  • It sits between gross margin (product economics) and net margin (bottom line) in the profitability waterfall.
  • Operating leverage drives margin expansion as revenue grows faster than fixed costs.
  • Always benchmark against the same industry — ranges vary from 2% (grocery) to 35%+ (software).
  • Supplement with free cash flow metrics since operating margin is accrual-based, not cash-based.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is operating margin the same as EBIT margin?

In most cases, yes. EBIT margin and operating margin both divide operating-level profit by revenue. They can differ slightly if a company reports non-operating income above the EBIT line, but for standard analysis they’re interchangeable.

What’s a good operating margin?

It varies by industry. Above 20% is generally strong for most sectors. Above 30% is exceptional and usually signals pricing power or a highly scalable cost structure. Under 5% is razor-thin and leaves little room for error.

Why is my operating margin lower than my gross margin?

Always. Operating margin deducts operating expenses (SG&A, R&D, depreciation) that gross margin doesn’t include. The gap between the two tells you how much the company spends to run its operations beyond direct production costs.

Can a company have a positive gross margin but negative operating margin?

Yes, and it’s common among startups and growth-stage companies. They sell their product above cost (positive gross margin) but spend heavily on sales, marketing, and R&D, which pushes operating income into the red.