Sticker businesses need to price sheets and individual stickers to cover vinyl, printing, cutting, and packaging while staying competitive.
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
Stickers are a volume game: per-unit material cost is tiny (often $0.10β0.50) but die-cutting, weeding and packaging take time, and marketplace fees eat thin margins. Individual die-cut stickers commonly sell for $2β4 and packs for $8β15. Price for setup and labor per order plus material, lean on bulk to drop per-unit cost, and never forget the marketplace and shipping cut.
Material is pennies, but printing, cutting, weeding and packing take time. Price for labor per order, not just the sticker's material cost.
Etsy or shop fees plus shipping can exceed the sticker's cost on a $3 item. Subtract them before claiming a margin.
Mailing a single sticker still costs postage and a mailer. Build shipping into the price or set a sensible flat rate.
A sticker sheet or pack amortizes setup over many designs. Offer packs and bulk so per-unit labor drops and order value rises.
Once your pricing works, these are the tools small operators use to take payments, keep books, and market.
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Individual die-cut stickers commonly sell for $2β4 and packs for $8β15. Material is only $0.10β0.50 each, so the markup (4β10Γ) covers cutting, weeding, packing and fees. The calculator above models it once you add your costs.
Because material is pennies β the real cost is your time printing, cutting and packing, plus marketplace and shipping fees. A $0.30 sticker still takes labor and incurs fees that a cost-plus price would ignore.
Postage and a mailer can cost as much as the sticker. Either build shipping into the item price or set a flat shipping rate so a single-sticker order doesn't sell at a loss.
Both, but packs raise order value and spread setup over more stickers, improving margin. Pricing packs at a slight per-unit discount encourages bigger orders.
On a $3 sticker, Etsy or platform fees plus payment processing can be 15β25%. Subtract all fees before deciding your margin, since they hit small-ticket items hard.
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.