Pizza shops must balance ingredient quality with competitive pricing. Calculate costs for dough, cheese, toppings, and labor to set menu prices that drive profit.
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
A pizzeria lives and dies on two numbers: food cost and labor. Ingredients β dough, sauce, cheese, toppings β should land around 25β33% of the menu price, and cheese alone is often half of that and the most volatile. Add labor at 25β35%, and your prime cost (food + labor) needs to stay under roughly 65% or there's nothing left for rent and profit. The classic rule is to price a pizza at 3β4Γ its ingredient cost.
Flour and sauce are cheap, but cheese, labor, oven gas and rent are not. Pricing off ingredient cost alone leaves rent and wages unpaid.
Cheese can be 40β50% of your food cost and its price is volatile. A menu priced last year may be underwater after a cheese spike.
DoorDash and Uber Eats take 15β30%. Selling at dine-in prices on the apps can turn a profitable pizza into a loss.
Mistakes, comps and staff meals are real. Build 3β5% waste into the price or it quietly eats your margin.
Once your pricing works, these are the tools small operators use to take payments, keep books, and market.
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Add up the ingredient cost per pizza (dough, sauce, cheese, toppings), then multiply by 3β4Γ to cover labor, overhead and profit. A pizza with $3 in ingredients typically sells for $12β18. Plug your real costs and volume into the calculator above to see your exact margin and break-even.
Aim for food cost at 25β33% of the menu price. Cheese is usually the single biggest component, so track it closely β a cheese price spike can quietly push you past 35% and erase your profit.
Prime cost is food cost plus labor cost. For a healthy pizzeria it should stay under about 65% of revenue. If prime cost creeps higher, rent and profit get squeezed no matter how busy you are.
Third-party apps charge 15β30% commission. Set a separate, higher price for delivery platforms (many shops add 15β25%) so the commission doesn't wipe out your margin.
It's a starting point. The 3Γ ingredient rule works for a simple cheese pie, but specialty pizzas with premium toppings, plus high labor and delivery fees, often need 3.5β4Γ or item-level pricing to stay profitable.
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.