Microeconomics

Sales Calculator

Multiply the unit price by the number of units sold to find total sales revenue.

  • Free
  • No sign-up
  • Updated for 2026

Price & units

$

Enter unit price and units sold to see sales revenue.

Worked example

With these example inputs:

  • Unit price$25
  • Units sold400

Sales revenue: $10,000

  • Unit price$25
  • Units sold400

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What this sales calculator does

This calculator finds your total sales revenue. You enter a unit price and the units sold. The tool then multiplies the two. So you see the money the sales bring in. It is a fast way to total a sale. The result is shown in your currency.

What sales revenue is

Sales revenue is the money from selling. It is price times the number sold. It counts the full amount before costs. So it is the top line of a business. It does not subtract what you spent. It is the starting point for profit.

How it is calculated

The tool takes your unit price. It multiplies it by the units sold. So a higher price lifts the total. More units sold lift it too. The result is your sales revenue. The calculator runs the numbers for you.

What the result tells you

The result shows your sales revenue. A price of twenty-five across four hundred units is ten thousand. A higher price raises it. More units raise it too. So it shows the cash the sales bring. It is a straightforward figure.

The unit price

Your unit price is the price of one item. It is what each sale charges the buyer. A higher price lifts the revenue. So this number sets the value per sale. Use the price you actually charge. It is the base of the whole sum. Enter your unit price.

The units sold

Your units sold is how many you sold. It is the count over the period you pick. More units sold lift the revenue. So this number sets the volume. Use the real number of sales. Whole units work best here. Enter your units sold.

Revenue versus profit

Revenue is not the same as profit. Revenue is all the money coming in. Profit is what is left after costs. So a big revenue can still mean small profit. High costs eat into the total. Always look at both numbers together. This keeps the picture honest.

Why tracking revenue matters

Revenue is a key health sign. It shows demand for what you sell. Rising revenue can mean a growing business. So it is worth tracking over time. Compare it across weeks or months. Watch for trends, not just one figure. It guides pricing and planning.

How to use it

Enter your unit price first. Add the units sold. Read the sales revenue in your chosen currency. Then try a higher price. See how the total shifts. Compare a few prices. Use it to plan your sales.

The limits of this calculator

Keep its limits in mind. It uses one price and one count. It assumes every unit sells at that price. It ignores discounts and returns. It does not subtract any costs. So treat the figure as a guide. So check your full sales records.

A final tip

Use this to total your sales revenue fast. Remember it is before costs. Use your real selling price. Allow for any discounts you give. Compare revenue across periods. Do not mistake revenue for profit. A careful view guides your pricing.

Frequently asked questions

How is sales revenue calculated?

Multiply the price per unit by the number of units sold. Selling 400 units at $25 each gives $10,000 in sales revenue.

Is this gross or net revenue?

This is gross sales revenue before discounts, returns or taxes. Subtract those separately to reach net revenue.