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Unit Economics Calculator โ€‹

Analyze profitability on a per-unit basis to understand revenue, cost, and profit efficiency for merchants, users, and transactions.


Purpose โ€‹

This calculator helps you:

  • Understand which customer segments are profitable
  • Evaluate pricing strategy and COGS management
  • Identify scaling constraints
  • Optimize cost structure
  • Validate unit economics assumptions

Interactive Calculator โ€‹

Scenario Presets

Custom Inputs

Profitability Metrics

Gross Profit
$42,500.00
85.0% margin
Net Profit
$22,500.00
45.0% margin

Per-Unit Economics

MetricPer MerchantPer UserPer Transaction
Revenue$500.00$10.00$3.33
Operating Cost$200.00$4.00$1.33
Unit Economics$300.00$6.00$2.00

Unit Economics Summary

  • โœ… Merchant economics healthy: Each merchant contributes $300.00 in profit after operating costs.
  • โœ… User economics positive: Each user generates $6.00 in profit.
  • โœ… Excellent gross margin: 85.0% indicates strong pricing/efficiency.
  • โœ… Exceptional profitability: 45.0% net margin is exceptional.

How to Use โ€‹

1. Load a Preset Scenario โ€‹

Click Pilot, Growth, or Scale to see realistic unit economics at different company sizes.

  • Pilot: Small operation with tight unit economics
  • Growth: Mid-stage with improving margins
  • Scale: Large operation with efficient unit economics

2. Adjust Custom Inputs โ€‹

  • Monthly Revenue: Total revenue (5K - 500K range)
  • Active Merchants: Number of paying merchant customers
  • Active Users: Total registered users (all merchants' users combined)
  • Monthly Transactions: Total transactions processed
  • COGS %: Cost of goods sold as % of revenue (payment processing, infrastructure, etc.)
  • Operating Costs: Salaries, rent, marketing, fixed overhead

3. Read Results โ€‹

Profitability Metrics โ€‹

  • Gross Profit: Revenue minus COGS (margin % shown)
  • Net Profit: Gross profit minus operating costs (margin % shown)

Per-Unit Economics Table โ€‹

Shows revenue, cost, and unit profit for three dimensions:

  • Per Merchant: How much each merchant contributes
  • Per User: How much each user generates
  • Per Transaction: How much each transaction produces

Unit Economics Summary โ€‹

Smart insights on:

  • โœ… Merchant/user unit economics (positive = each contributes profit after overhead)
  • โš ๏ธ Warnings if unit economics are negative
  • โ„น๏ธ Gross margin health (80%+ is excellent, 50%+ is healthy)
  • โ„น๏ธ Net margin assessment (30%+ is exceptional, 10%+ is solid)

Key Concepts โ€‹

Gross Margin โ€‹

Revenue - COGS = Gross Profit

% of revenue left after direct costs (payment processing, server infrastructure, delivery).

Healthy benchmarks:

  • 80%+: Software/digital products (minimal COGS)
  • 50-80%: SaaS platforms (some infrastructure costs)
  • 30-50%: Physical goods (material costs)

Lantern target: 85%+ (digital marketplace, low COGS).

Net Margin โ€‹

Gross Profit - Operating Costs = Net Profit

% of revenue left after ALL costs (salaries, marketing, rent, etc.).

Benchmarks:

  • > 30%: Exceptional (venture-scale)
  • 10-30%: Healthy (sustainable)
  • 0-10%: Breakeven area (growth focus)
  • < 0%: Operating at a loss

Lantern target at scale: 20-30% (balance growth investment with profitability).

Unit Economics โ€‹

Per-unit profit = Per-unit revenue - Per-unit cost

Example:

  • Each merchant generates 1,650/year revenue (165/month ร— 10 months)
  • Operating costs / merchants = cost per merchant
  • If cost per merchant < per-merchant revenue, the unit is profitable

Key insight: Even if overall company is profitable, some units might be unprofitable. Identify and fix.

Customer Payback Period โ€‹

How long it takes to recoup operating costs for a customer.

If a merchant costs $85 to serve annually (operating cost allocated) and generates $165/month (ARPU), payback is:

$85 cost รท $165/month revenue = ~6 weeks

Quick payback (< 3 months) = strong unit economics. Long payback (> 6 months) = risky.


Scenarios Explained โ€‹

Pilot Phase โ€‹

Metrics:

  • $5K/month revenue, 10 merchants, 500 users
  • 20% COGS (higher due to % fees)
  • $5K operating costs (founder salary or contractor)

Unit Economics:

  • Per-merchant revenue: $500
  • Per-merchant cost: $500
  • Merchant unit econ: Break-even
  • Per-user cost: $10
  • User unit econ: Very tight

Insight: Early stage, barely profitable on merchant basis. Focus on retention and scale to improve.

Growth Phase โ€‹

Metrics:

  • $50K/month revenue, 100 merchants, 5K users
  • 15% COGS (economies of scale)
  • $20K operating costs

Unit Economics:

  • Per-merchant revenue: $500
  • Per-merchant cost: $200
  • Merchant unit econ: +$300 profit (strong)
  • Per-user profit: $6
  • Per-transaction: +$3 profit

Insight: Clear profitable unit economics. Each merchant and user contributes to the bottom line.

Scale Phase โ€‹

Metrics:

  • $300K/month revenue, 500 merchants, 30K users
  • 12% COGS (infrastructure efficiency)
  • $80K operating costs

Unit Economics:

  • Per-merchant revenue: $600
  • Per-merchant cost: $160
  • Merchant unit econ: +$440 profit (very strong)
  • Per-user revenue: $10
  • Per-transaction: +$2.40 profit

Insight: Excellent unit economics at scale. Fixed costs are now negligible per unit.


How to Use for Decision-Making โ€‹

Test Pricing Decisions โ€‹

Question: "Should we lower ARPU from $165 to $150?"

  1. Adjust merchant count up (model more merchants at lower price)
  2. Lower ARPU in pilot revenue calculator
  3. Compare unit economics before/after
  4. If per-merchant profit drops below breakeven, price cut is risky

Evaluate New Markets โ€‹

Question: "Can we afford to enter a new geography with higher CAC?"

  1. Model increased operating costs (marketing budget)
  2. Assume same COGS, merchants, users
  3. Check if net profit stays positive
  4. If unit economics remain healthy, expansion is feasible

Optimize Cost Structure โ€‹

Question: "Where should we cut costs?"

  1. Run baseline scenario
  2. Adjust operating costs down by 20%
  3. Observe impact on net margin
  4. For best ROI, focus on high-impact areas (salaries, infrastructure)

Pricing Strategy โ€‹

Question: "Can we increase ARPU from $165 to $200?"

  1. Check gross margin impact (higher revenue, same COGS)
  2. Model potential merchant churn (fewer merchants at higher price)
  3. Compare total net profit with Pilot Revenue Calculator
  4. If profits are higher despite lower merchant count, price increase is justified

Common Questions โ€‹

Q: What's a healthy COGS %?
A: For Lantern (digital marketplace):

  • Pilot: 20-25% (includes payment processing fees + cloud costs)
  • Growth: 12-18% (improved scale and negotiated rates)
  • Scale: 8-12% (infrastructure efficiency, dedicated deals)

Target: Continuously improve as you scale.

Q: Why does per-user unit economics matter?
A: Users don't directly pay, but they drive transaction volume. High per-user cost with low per-transaction revenue = unprofitable user base.

Q: If per-merchant unit econ is negative, what do we do?
A: Either increase ARPU (pricing or upsell), reduce per-merchant cost (ops efficiency), or exit that segment.

Q: What's the relationship between merchant and user unit econ?
A: They're related but different:

  • Merchant unit econ: Is the customer contract profitable?
  • User unit econ: Are users driving enough transaction value?

Both must be positive for overall profitability.


Integration with Other Docs โ€‹


Last Updated: 2026-01-11

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