What Is Operating Margin?
Operating margin measures how much profit a company makes from its core operations, expressed as a percentage of revenue. It is operating income, revenue after both the cost of goods sold and operating expenses, divided by revenue. Sitting between gross margin and net margin, it captures the profitability of running the business itself, before the effects of financing and taxes. Because it reflects how well a company controls both production and operating costs, it is one of the clearest reads on operational efficiency.
How to Calculate Operating Margin
Operating Margin % = Operating Income / Revenue
where Operating Income = Revenue – COGS – Operating Expenses.
Worked example:
- Revenue: $5,000,000
- Cost of goods sold: $3,000,000
- Operating expenses: $1,200,000
- Operating income: 5,000,000 – 3,000,000 – 1,200,000 = $800,000
- Operating margin: 800,000 / 5,000,000 = 16%
Operating Margin in Power BI (DAX)
Replace the measures with the ones in your model:
Operating Income = [Total Revenue] - [Total COGS] - [Operating Expenses]
Operating Margin % = DIVIDE ( [Operating Income], [Total Revenue] )
DIVIDE handles a zero-revenue period safely. Format the margin measure as a percentage.
What Is a Good Operating Margin?
It varies widely by industry. Software and services run high; retail and distribution run thin. The useful signal is the trend and the comparison to peers: a rising operating margin shows the business is converting more of each revenue dollar into operating profit, while a falling one points to cost or pricing pressure in operations.
Operating Margin vs Gross and Net Margin
The three margins step down the income statement. Gross margin subtracts only the cost of goods sold. Operating margin also subtracts operating expenses, capturing the cost of running the business. Net margin goes further still, subtracting interest and taxes to reach the bottom line. Read together they show where profit is made and where it is lost on the way down.
Reporting Operating Margin From Your ERP Data
Operating margin depends on revenue, cost of goods sold, and operating expenses being classified consistently, which is where it gets difficult across modules and entities. A governed data foundation applies that classification once so the margin reads the same in every report. QuickLaunch ships pre-built models for JD Edwards, Vista, NetSuite, and OneStream that surface revenue and cost data for margin analysis without rebuilding the logic by hand.
Frequently Asked Questions
How is operating margin calculated?
Divide operating income by revenue. Operating income is revenue minus the cost of goods sold and operating expenses. A company with $800K of operating income on $5M revenue has a 16% operating margin.
What is the difference between operating margin and net margin?
Operating margin measures profitability from core operations, before interest and taxes. Net margin subtracts interest and taxes too, so it is always lower and reflects the final bottom line.
What is a good operating margin?
It depends heavily on the industry. The trend over time and the comparison to peers matter more than the absolute number; a rising operating margin signals improving operational efficiency.