Margynn

Guide ยท Published on February 23, 2026

How to calculate real landed cost per product

If you only use supplier purchase cost to set your price, the margin you see can be misleading. Landed cost gives you real SKU cost once the product is ready to sell, including logistics, duties and import taxes.

Warehouse logistics context for landed cost
Photo by Russ Murray on Unsplash

What landed cost is and why supplier cost alone is misleading

Landed cost is the full accumulated cost of moving a product from origin to point of sale. When you only look at the supplier invoice, you miss key cost layers that fully change profitability: freight, customs costs, insurance, fees, duties and import VAT.

This gap usually appears weeks later, when final margin does not match expectations. That is why ecommerce teams with strong volume often end with lower-than-expected profit: pricing was calculated on incomplete cost.

How to allocate per unit without losing control

The base is simple: add direct and indirect shipment costs and allocate them across units. If you run multiple SKUs, define one consistent allocation rule (by unit, weight, volume, or value) and keep it stable to avoid inconsistent decisions.

Practical formula by SKU

Landed cost per unit = (Total supplier cost + Freight/logistics + Duties + Import VAT) / Units

Quick example

Concept Value
Total supplier cost 8.000 EUR
Total freight/logistics 1.600 EUR
Duty (8%) 768 EUR
Import VAT (21%) 2.170,56 EUR
Units 800
Landed cost per unit 15,67 EUR

Landed Cost Calculator by SKU

Complete the fields to calculate real unit cost, estimated total cost, and margin with your selling price.

Cost and pricing visual for ecommerce
Landed cost per unit EUR 0,00
Estimated total cost EUR 0,00
Margin with selling price 0.00% Not calculated

Mini pricing simulation

Select a strategy to autofill selling price and recalculate margin.

What you think vs reality

What you think Reality
Unit cost (expected): 0.00 EUR Unit cost (real): 0.00 EUR
Expected margin: 0.00% Real margin: 0.00%
Minimum price (expected): 0.00 EUR Minimum price (real): 0.00 EUR
Risk: hidden costs not visible Risk: controlled with real cost

What changes with duties, taxes and multiple documents

In import operations, SKU cost is not static. Duties can change by tariff code, applicable VAT can change by tax regime, logistics can vary by season, and exchange rates move. If that context updates late, published prices start from outdated data.

The core issue is not spreadsheets by themselves. The issue is working across multiple files, versions and criteria. With large catalogs, multi-supplier documents and mixed currencies, Excel workflows become fragile for SKU-level traceability.

Margynn fits as an operational layer that centralizes documents, cost, inventory and pricing in one flow. It does not replace your commercial strategy, it makes execution more reliable because pricing starts from real cost instead of assumptions.

Common mistakes that destroy margin

  • Setting selling price from supplier cost only.
  • Not allocating logistics and customs by SKU.
  • Applying duties/VAT with inconsistent rules across shipments.
  • Mixing currencies without a consistent exchange rate.
  • Updating the catalog without recalculating landed cost.
  • Launching promotions without checking updated real margin.

Minimum operational checklist

  • Centralize purchase, logistics and taxes in one source.
  • Define one allocation rule by SKU and keep it stable.
  • Recalculate costs when duty, VAT or exchange rate changes.
  • Validate real margin before publishing or promoting.
Night city skyline representing operational control
Photo by Timelab on Unsplash

Recommended internal reads

To complement this topic, review how to avoid inventory errors when importing supplier catalogs .

Move from estimates to prices with real margin

When SKU cost is clear, better negotiation and pricing decisions stop being a bet.

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