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What Is Gross Margin? A Simple Guide for Investors

Author: Nate Gregory
Published: Jun 15, 2026 
Disclosure: Briefs Finance is not a broker-dealer or investment adviser. All content is general information and for educational purposes only, not individualized advice or recommendations to buy or sell any security. Investing involves significant risk, including possible loss of principal, and past performance does not guarantee future results. You are solely responsible for your investment decisions and should consult a licensed financial, legal, or tax professional before acting on any information provided.
Summary:
  • Gross margin shows how much money a company keeps from each sale after paying to make the product.
  • The formula is simple: revenue minus the cost of goods sold, shown as a percent of revenue.
  • A high, steady gross margin often signals a strong business with pricing power.

Every time you buy something, the company keeps a slice of your money and hands the rest to its suppliers.

Gross margin is the size of that slice.

It is the very first profit line on a company's books, and it tells you a surprising amount before you read anything else about the business.

That is the kind of plain-English money math we send every morning in Market Briefs, our free daily newsletter. Now let's break down what gross margin actually means.

What Is Gross Margin, in Plain English?

Gross margin is what's left from a sale after you subtract the direct cost of the thing you sold.

That direct cost has a name: cost of goods sold, or COGS - the money a company spends to make or buy the product before any other bills.

Picture an orange five-gallon bucket at Home Depot.

Home Depot pays $1 for that bucket and sells it for $2.

The sale is $2, the cost of goods sold is $1, and that leaves $1 in gross profit.

On a $2 sale, keeping $1 is a 50% gross margin. That is the whole idea, scaled up to billions.

The Gross Margin Formula (How to Calculate It)

Here is the formula in one line:

Gross margin = (Revenue - Cost of goods sold) ÷ Revenue

Multiply the result by 100 to get a percent.

The piece in the middle - revenue minus cost of goods sold - is the gross profit. Gross margin just turns that dollar figure into a percentage so you can compare companies of any size.

Gross Margin vs. Gross Profit

People mix these up, so here is the clean version:

  • Gross profit is a dollar amount. It is revenue minus cost of goods sold.
  • Gross margin is gross profit shown as a percent of revenue.

A corner store and a giant retailer can both run a 30% gross margin even though their gross profit dollars are worlds apart. The percentage is what lets you line them up side by side.

A Real Gross Margin Example (Home Depot)

Let's use Home Depot, since it sells simple, physical things.

In one recent year, Home Depot pulled in about $151 billion in sales. The goods it sold cost roughly $100 billion. That left about $51 billion in gross profit, which works out to a gross margin of about 34%.

But gross profit is only the top of the income statement. Here is how that $151 billion travels all the way down to the bottom line:

Line Amount What it is
Net sales (revenue) ~$151B Everything Home Depot sold
Cost of goods sold ~$100B Direct cost of those goods
Gross profit ~$51B Revenue minus COGS
Gross margin ~34% Gross profit ÷ revenue
Operating expenses ~$28B Salaries, marketing, store overhead
Operating income ~$23B Gross profit minus operating expenses
Interest expense ~$1.4B The cost of its debt
Income taxes ~$5.3B The tax bill
Net earnings ~$16.4B The true bottom line

So gross margin is the first cut. It only accounts for the direct cost of the products. Everything else - the operating expenses, the interest, the taxes - comes out lower down.

What Is a Good Gross Margin?

There is no single magic number, and anyone who gives you one is guessing.

A good gross margin depends almost entirely on the industry. A retailer that moves huge volumes of physical goods, like Home Depot, runs a much lower margin than a business that sells software or services.

What matters more than the raw number is the trend.

  • Stable margin: Home Depot has held a gross margin around 33% for years. That kind of consistency signals real pricing power.
  • Rising margin: the company is getting more efficient, or it can charge more without losing customers.
  • Falling margin: costs are climbing, or competition is forcing prices down.

Home Depot's steadiness is not an accident. It mostly competes with Lowe's, so the two operate almost like a duopoly - a market run by just a couple of big players - which gives both of them room to hold prices steady.

When you study when to buy a stock, a durable margin like that is exactly the kind of quality clue you are hunting for.

Gross Margin vs. Operating Margin vs. Net Margin

Gross margin is one of three profit margins investors watch, and each one strips out more cost than the last.

Margin Formula What it accounts for
Gross margin Gross profit ÷ revenue Only the direct cost of the goods
Operating margin Operating income ÷ revenue Goods cost plus running the business
Net margin Net earnings ÷ revenue Everything, including interest and taxes

Using the Home Depot numbers above, the gross margin is about 34%, but by the time you reach net earnings of $16.4 billion, the net margin - the bottom-line profit on every sales dollar - is closer to 11%.

If you want to go a layer deeper on the middle row, our guides on operating margin and EBITDA pick up right where this one leaves off.

Why Gross Margin Matters to Investors

Gross margin answers a basic question: does this company actually make money on the core thing it sells, before any overhead?

If the gross margin is thin or shrinking, every other profit number below it is fighting uphill.

A healthy gross margin does a few things for the business and for you as a part-owner:

  • It funds the operating expenses needed to grow.
  • It leaves room for free cash flow - the cash a company has left after its bills and reinvestment.
  • It gives management the choice to pay dividends, buy back shares, or pay down debt.

That last point is the heart of it. After all the bills are paid, those net earnings belong to shareholders - which is one reason gross margin sits near the top of any serious look at a company's assets and earning power.

How Investors Use Gross Margin to Value a Company

Gross margin is not just a report-card stat. It is a building block for figuring out what a business is worth.

One common method projects a company's future revenue, then multiplies it by an expected gross margin to estimate future profits.

That is why analysts assume a margin and carry it forward. For Home Depot, you might assume it keeps earning roughly its long-run 33% gross margin, then work down to future profits and free cash flow from there.

This is the same muscle you use across the rest of financial analysis:

Together these tell you whether a company is well run, and whether the stock is a fair deal. Margins are simply the first chapter of that story.

The Bottom Line on Gross Margin

Gross margin is the cleanest first look at a company's quality.

It shows how much a business keeps on every sale before overhead, it reveals pricing power when it holds steady, and it feeds straight into how investors value the publicly traded companies they own.

Master this one number and the rest of the income statement gets a lot less intimidating - which is the whole point of learning when to buy a stock and, just as importantly, when to sell one.

We turn numbers like this into a two-minute read every morning in Market Briefs, our free daily newsletter. Join free and start reading the market like an owner, not a guesser.


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