How many units must a business sell before it starts to make a profit?
Break-even analysis: the concept of break-even, contribution, the calculation of break-even output, the margin of safety, interpreting a break-even chart, and the usefulness and limitations of break-even analysis.
A focused answer to the Eduqas GCSE Business C510 content on break-even analysis, covering the concept of break-even, contribution, the break-even formula, the margin of safety, reading a break-even chart, and the uses and limits of break-even.
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What this topic is asking
Eduqas C510 wants you to understand the concept of break-even, the idea of contribution, how to calculate break-even output, the margin of safety, how to read a break-even chart, and the uses and limits of break-even analysis. It builds directly on revenue and costs, and it is one of the most reliable calculation questions on Component 2, so the formula must be automatic.
The concept of break-even
The idea behind it is contribution. Each unit sold brings in its selling price but only costs its variable cost to make, so the difference, the contribution, goes towards paying off the fixed costs. Once enough units have been sold for the total contribution to cover all the fixed costs, the business breaks even, and every unit after that adds its contribution straight to profit.
The margin of safety
A large margin of safety means the business has plenty of room before a fall in demand pushes it into a loss, which reduces risk. A small or negative margin means it is selling at or below break-even and is vulnerable, so the margin of safety is a quick way to judge how exposed a business is.
Reading a break-even chart
The total revenue and total cost lines cross at the break-even point: read straight down to the output axis for the break-even output. To the left of the crossing point the cost line is above the revenue line (a loss); to the right the revenue line is above (a profit). The vertical gap between the two lines at any output is the profit or loss at that output, and the horizontal distance from break-even to the chosen output is the margin of safety.
Why break-even is useful, and its limits
But it relies on assumptions that rarely hold exactly: that everything produced is sold, that it is all sold at one price, and that costs rise in straight lines. In reality businesses offer discounts, costs change in steps, and not everything sells, so break-even is a useful guide, not an exact prediction.
Try this
Q1. Selling price is , variable cost is per unit, fixed costs are . Calculate the break-even output. [2 marks]
- Cue. Contribution: ; break-even: units.
Q2. A business breaks even at units and sells . State its margin of safety. [1 mark]
- Cue. units.
Exam-style practice questions
Practice questions written in the style of WJEC Eduqas exam questions on this dot point, with worked answer explainers. The year tag is the paper they imitate, not the source.
Eduqas 20193 marksA business sells its product for . Its variable cost is per unit and its fixed costs are . Calculate the break-even output. Show your working. (Component 2)Show worked answer →
A 3-mark AO2 calculation. The contribution per unit is the selling price minus the variable cost per unit, which is . Break-even output is fixed costs divided by contribution per unit, which is units. Markers award marks for the correct contribution per unit, the correct method (fixed costs divided by contribution), and the correct answer of 3,000 units. A common error is to divide fixed costs by the selling price instead of by the contribution per unit, which gives the wrong figure.
Eduqas 20216 marksA business breaks even at units and expects to sell units. Calculate its margin of safety, then analyse why the margin of safety is useful to this business. (Component 2)Show worked answer →
A 6-mark question split between AO2 calculation and AO3 analysis. The margin of safety is actual (or expected) output minus break-even output, which is units. Analysis (chained and applied): the margin of safety of 1,200 units shows how far sales could fall before the business stops making a profit, so the larger it is the more cushion the business has against a drop in demand. For this business a 1,200-unit margin means sales could fall by more than a quarter (1,200 out of 4,200) and it would still avoid a loss, which gives the owner confidence and reduces the risk of a price or investment decision. Markers reward the correct margin of safety figure plus a developed chain explaining what it tells the business and why that matters.
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Sources & how we know this
- WJEC Eduqas GCSE Business specification (C510) — WJEC Eduqas (2017)