Two companies can earn the exact same revenue and look nothing alike underneath. One keeps thirty cents of every dollar as core profit. The other keeps five. The EBITDA margin is what tells you which is which.
Let's break down what EBITDA margin means, how to calculate it, and how investors actually use it.
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What Is EBITDA Margin?
First, the long word. EBITDA stands for Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization. In plain terms, it's a measure of a company's core operating profit before a few big accounting and financing items.
The EBITDA margin takes that profit and turns it into a percentage of revenue.
So while EBITDA is a dollar figure, the EBITDA margin is a percent. That percent lets you compare a corner business to a giant, because you're measuring efficiency, not size.
A 30% EBITDA margin means the company keeps 30 cents of core profit from every dollar of sales.
The EBITDA Margin Formula
Here it is in one line:
EBITDA margin = EBITDA ÷ Revenue
Multiply by 100 for a percent.
To use it, you need two numbers, and both live on the company's income statement:
- Revenue - the total sales, the top line.
- EBITDA - core profit before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization.
Depreciation and amortization are non-cash charges that spread out the cost of big purchases over time. EBITDA adds them back to get closer to the cash the operations throw off.
How to Calculate EBITDA Margin Step by Step
Walk it through with simple numbers.
1. Start with revenue. Say a company sells $100 million worth of goods. 2. Find EBITDA. After core operating costs, but before interest, taxes, depreciation, and
amortization, say it earns $25 million. 3. Divide: $25 million ÷ $100 million = 0.25. 4. Multiply by 100: a 25% EBITDA margin.
That's it. Every dollar of sales produces 25 cents of core operating profit.
The numbers you need come straight from a company's annual report, the 10-K, which you can find free on the company's investor relations page or the SEC website.
EBITDA Margin vs. Other Margins
EBITDA margin is one of several ways to measure profitability, and each strips out different costs.
| Margin | What it measures | What it ignores |
|---|---|---|
| Gross margin | Profit after the direct cost of goods | Overhead, interest, taxes |
| Operating margin | Profit after running the business | Interest, taxes |
| EBITDA margin | Core operating profit | Interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization |
| Net margin | The true bottom-line profit | Nothing - it's after everything |
EBITDA margin sits in the middle. It's popular because it tries to show the underlying earning power of the business itself, separate from how it's financed or taxed.
Why Investors Use EBITDA Margin
EBITDA margin answers a focused question: how good is this company at its actual operations?
It's useful for a few reasons:
- Comparing companies. Two firms with different debt loads and tax situations can still be compared on core efficiency.
- Spotting trends. A rising EBITDA margin over several years suggests the business is getting leaner. A falling one is a flag.
- Feeding valuation. EBITDA pairs with other tools to value a company. One common metric, EV/EBITDA, compares a company's enterprise value to its EBITDA to judge how expensive the stock is.
That valuation link is real. For example, in one snapshot, Nvidia traded at an EV/EBITDA of 51x while rivals AMD, Taiwan Semiconductor, and Intel sat at 27.5x, 13.3x, and 17.8x. A strong EBITDA margin is part of what makes the market willing to pay up.
The Limits of EBITDA Margin
EBITDA margin is useful, not magic. Know what it leaves out.
It ignores interest, so a company drowning in debt can still show a healthy EBITDA margin while struggling to pay its lenders.
It ignores depreciation, so a business that constantly has to spend on equipment can look more profitable than it really is once you account for that spending.
That's why serious investors never lean on one number. They read it next to the full income statement, check free cash flow to see the real cash, and look at return on equity to judge how well the company turns investor money into profit.
EBITDA Margin and the Bigger Picture
A single margin won't tell you whether a stock is a buy. But it's a fast, honest read on quality.
Pair EBITDA margin with the basics - market capitalization , earnings per share, the P/E ratio, and the price-to-sales ratio - and you start to see a company in full. Add a sense of its moat, the durable edge that protects those margins, and you're thinking like an owner.
The bottom line: EBITDA margin is a clean way to compare how efficiently companies turn sales into core profit. Use it as one lens, not the whole picture.
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