Digital product creators should price based on value delivered, not just creation time. Account for platform fees, marketing costs, and market positioning.
Optimize your pricing strategy with AI-powered insights
Enter your shop name for a personalized PDF report with your business name.
How many items do you expect to sell each month?
π‘ Why needed? Fixed costs (Rent/Labor) must be split by each item. Lower sales = Higher cost per item. We need this to calculate your min break-even price.
Percentage of items that are wasted or unsold.
β Price is above break-even $18.35. You are making profit!
How much will you charge for one item?
Net Profit
$3325
per month
Margin
26.6%
profit margin
Break-Even
312
units/month
β Margin Detected: Your 26.6% profit margin is healthy for the cafe industry. You need to sell 312 units to break even, currently projecting 500 units.
Required Volume Growth β₯17% to break even
Current Expectation: 30% β
Digital products β courses, templates, ebooks, presets β have near-zero marginal cost, so cost-plus pricing leaves most of the value on the table. Price on the value or outcome delivered and on market positioning, not on the hours it took to create. Gross margins are typically 70β90%+; your real costs are platform fees and marketing, so anchor price to transformation and use tiers to capture different buyers.
A template that took 10 hours can sell hundreds of times. Cost-plus pricing ignores that buyers pay for the result, not your hours.
One price leaves money on the table. Good/better/best tiers capture both budget buyers and those who want the premium version.
Creators routinely price too low for fear it won't sell. Low prices can actually signal low value and attract the worst customers.
Course and payment platforms take a cut, and refunds happen. Factor them in even though marginal cost is near zero.
Once your pricing works, these are the tools small operators use to take payments, keep books, and market.
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Price on the value or outcome it delivers and your market positioning, not the hours it took to make. Marginal cost is near zero, so gross margins of 70β90%+ are normal. The calculator above helps you account for platform fees and goals.
Because a digital product is made once and sold many times. Buyers pay for the transformation or time it saves them, not your production hours β value-based pricing captures far more than cost-plus.
Yes. Good/better/best tiers (e.g. ebook, ebook + templates, full course) capture budget and premium buyers alike and raise average order value without new products.
Often, yes. Creators routinely price too low out of doubt. A price that's too cheap can signal low quality and attract refund-prone buyers β test higher price points against value.
Platform and payment fees, marketing and the occasional refund are your real costs. Even with near-zero delivery cost, factor these in so your net margin matches the high gross margin.
Many small business owners use the "3x material cost" rule or simply match competitor prices. The problem? This ignores your unique cost structure. Your rent might be higher, your waste rate different, or your labor costs vary by location. This calculator reveals your true break-even point and ensures sustainable pricing.
Download a clean, shareable PDF of your pricing breakdown β cost structure, break-even point, and profit scenarios β completely free, with no sign-up. Useful for partners, lenders, or your own records.