Check operating performance as a percentage
Expressing EBITDA as a margin can make it easier to compare periods, teams, or businesses with very different revenue totals.
Work Tools
Estimate EBITDA margin from EBITDA and total revenue.
Why this page exists
Operating performance is easier to compare when EBITDA is expressed as a share of revenue instead of being read only as a dollar amount. This calculator helps visitors estimate EBITDA margin from EBITDA and total revenue.
Interactive tool
Enter your numbers and read the result first, then use the sections below to understand what affects the outcome.
Calculator
Estimate EBITDA margin from EBITDA and total revenue.
Result
Estimated EBITDA margin based on the EBITDA and revenue entered.
This is a simplified operating-margin metric, not a full valuation or accounting analysis. EBITDA definitions can vary, so make sure the inputs are measured consistently.
Planning note
Last updated April 13, 2026. Use this tool to compare scenarios and plan ahead, then confirm important details with the lender, employer, insurer, contractor, or other qualified provider involved in the final decision.
How it works
Enter EBITDA and total revenue for the same period.
The calculator divides EBITDA by revenue.
It converts the result into a percentage so the margin is easier to compare.
Understanding your result
This is a simplified operating-margin estimate, not a full accounting analysis. It can be useful for quick comparison, but EBITDA definitions and exclusions can vary from one business to another.
Browse more work toolsExamples
Example scenarios help turn a quick estimate into a more useful comparison or planning step.
Expressing EBITDA as a margin can make it easier to compare periods, teams, or businesses with very different revenue totals.
Use the same revenue base with different EBITDA assumptions to see how quickly the operating picture changes.
EBITDA margin often fits naturally beside revenue run rate, ARR, and profit-margin checks.
FAQ
The calculator divides EBITDA by total revenue and expresses the result as a percentage.
Because EBITDA definitions can vary, and the usefulness of the margin depends on whether the inputs are measured consistently.
No. EBITDA margin is based on EBITDA, while net profit margin is based on bottom-line profit after additional costs and items are considered.
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