Break-even point is the sales level where total revenue equals total costs (variable + fixed). Below it, the restaurant loses money; above it, every dollar adds profit at the contribution margin rate.
Formula: Break-even Sales = Fixed Costs ÷ Contribution Margin %
Why the break-even point is the most important number a new operator doesn't calculate
Independent operators routinely sign leases without running break-even math. The pattern: a concept projects sales, a build-out gets financed, and the first slow week reveals that the restaurant needed sales 25% above the actual run-rate just to cover fixed costs. By then the lease is locked.
The right sequence: calculate break-even before signing the lease, then check it against realistic same-market comp data. If break-even sales require a covers-per-day count that the location can't physically deliver, the concept doesn't work at that lease.
How to calculate break-even
- Sum fixed costs: rent, property tax, building insurance, manager salary, loan payments, software subscriptions, business insurance — anything that doesn't change with sales volume.
- Calculate contribution margin %: (Sales − Variable Costs) ÷ Sales × 100. Variable costs are food cost and the variable portion of labor (line cooks, servers — not the salaried manager).
- Divide fixed costs by contribution margin %.
Example: $35,000 monthly fixed costs. Variable costs run 60% of sales (food + variable labor), so contribution margin = 40%. Break-even = $35,000 ÷ 0.40 = $87,500 in monthly sales. Translated: the restaurant needs $87,500/month or about $2,900/day to break even. If the location can't deliver that consistently, the concept fails.
Break-even calculator
Compute the monthly and daily sales threshold the operation has to hit just to cover costs. Run this before signing the lease, not after the first slow quarter.
Fixed costs include rent, property tax, building insurance, manager salary, loan payments, software subscriptions. Contribution margin = (sales − variable costs) ÷ sales × 100. The cover count assumes the average-check input as the per-guest figure.
The daily break-even discipline
Convert monthly break-even to a daily number. If break-even is $87,500/month and the restaurant is open 28 days, daily break-even is $3,125. Operators who write the daily number on the office whiteboard and watch it accumulate through the week make better Tuesday-and-Wednesday staffing calls than operators who only see the number in the monthly P&L.
Common operator mistakes
- Treating all labor as variable. Salaried manager, kitchen lead, and minimum-staffing roles are effectively fixed. Putting them all in the variable bucket inflates contribution margin and lowers break-even — both wrong.
- Excluding loan payments from fixed costs. Debt service is real cash that has to come out of operations. Operators who calculate break-even on operational P&L only miss the actual cash break-even.
- Calculating once, never recalculating. Fixed costs drift up over time (rent escalators, insurance increases). Recalculate quarterly.
Related concepts
- Contribution margin — the denominator
- Occupancy cost percentage — the largest fixed cost in most concepts
- What does it cost to open a restaurant in Texas? — the capital model that should anchor break-even projections
- How to read your restaurant P&L — where break-even sits in the P&L stack