AMAZON PPC • PROFITABILITY

How to Calculate Your Breakeven ACoS

ACoS without context is just a number. Breakeven ACoS tells you what your advertising metrics actually mean for profitability, allowing you to make smarter bid decisions with financial precision.

M
MyAMZTeam Editorial
7 min read
Updated Q2 2026
4,880 views

ACoS — Advertising Cost of Sale — is one of the most discussed Amazon PPC metrics.

But most sellers never calculate the single number that actually determines whether their advertising is profitable: breakeven ACoS.

Without this number, every PPC decision becomes guesswork. With it, campaign optimization becomes a financial system.

What Breakeven ACoS Actually Means

Breakeven ACoS is the point where your advertising generates exactly zero net profit.

Any ACoS above breakeven means your paid sales are losing money. Any ACoS below breakeven means your campaigns are profitable.

Why It Matters

  • Sets realistic PPC targets
  • Improves bid precision
  • Protects profitability
  • Prevents overspending
  • Creates scalable campaign strategy

Breakeven ACoS Formula

Formula

Breakeven ACoS = (Price − COGS − FBA Fees − Variable Costs) ÷ Price × 100

This formula calculates how much advertising spend your product can absorb before becoming unprofitable.

Real Example Calculation

Example Product

  • Sale Price: $34.99
  • COGS: $8.50
  • FBA Fees: $6.80
  • Returns Allowance: $1.20

Profit Before Ads = $18.49

Breakeven ACoS = 52.8%

That means any advertising campaign operating below 52.8% ACoS is technically profitable on a contribution margin basis.

Target ACoS vs Breakeven ACoS

Breakeven ACoS represents your ceiling.

Your target ACoS should always sit below breakeven to maintain healthy margins and cash flow.

Product Stage Recommended ACoS Strategy Primary Goal
New Launch Near breakeven Ranking & reviews
Growth Phase Breakeven - 10% Visibility & scaling
Established Product Breakeven - 15% to 25% Margin protection
Market Leader Lowest sustainable ACoS Profit harvesting

Build an ASIN-Level Margin Model

Every ASIN should have its own breakeven ACoS calculation.

Different products have different:

  • Margins
  • FBA fees
  • Shipping costs
  • Conversion rates
  • Price sensitivity

Essential Inputs

  • Sale price
  • Landed COGS
  • Referral fees
  • FBA fulfillment fees
  • Storage costs
  • Expected return rate
  • Prep & inspection costs

FBA Fee Reality Check

FBA fees have increased significantly over the last several years.

Many brands are still operating with outdated cost assumptions, causing their breakeven calculations to be inaccurate.

Important:

Always pull current fee estimates directly from Amazon’s FBA Revenue Calculator before updating PPC targets.

Using Breakeven ACoS to Calculate Max CPC

Max CPC Formula

Max CPC = Price × Target ACoS × Conversion Rate

This formula helps determine the maximum sustainable bid your campaigns can support profitably.

Example

  • Price: $34.99
  • Target ACoS: 35%
  • Conversion Rate: 11%

Max CPC = $1.35

Better conversion rates increase sustainable bidding power.

This is why listing optimization and PPC performance are directly connected.

Common Breakeven ACoS Mistakes

  • Using industry averages instead of real margin data
  • Applying one ACoS target across all ASINs
  • Ignoring supplier cost increases
  • Failing to update FBA fee assumptions
  • Using launch-phase targets permanently

Final Thoughts

Breakeven ACoS is one of the most important metrics in Amazon PPC.

It transforms campaign management from emotional decision-making into data-driven financial optimization.

Once you understand your real margins, every bid adjustment, campaign target, and scaling decision becomes significantly clearer.

Need Help Optimizing Your Amazon PPC Profitability?

At MyAMZTeam, we help brands build profitable PPC systems using margin-based bidding strategies, conversion optimization, and advanced campaign structures.

Whether you’re scaling aggressively or trying to improve profitability, our team can help build a more efficient Amazon advertising strategy.