What's inside
Six templates that show you the real numbers behind every sale — margin after fees, profit after ads, and cash after inventory
Each template is a CSV file that opens in Google Sheets, Excel, Numbers, or any spreadsheet app. Pre-built formulas, realistic benchmarks, and clear column labels included.
01
SKU Margin Tracker
Per-SKU profitability breakdown: product cost (COGS), platform fee percentage, fixed platform fee, payment processing fee, shipping cost (outbound), packaging cost, advertising cost per unit (based on your CPC and conversion rate), returns provision (refund rate × average refund value), gross revenue per unit, total variable cost per unit, net margin per unit (dollars), net margin percentage, and monthly volume column to calculate aggregate monthly net profit per SKU. The final column is a margin health flag: green for margins above your target, yellow for marginal SKUs worth optimizing, red for SKUs that are cash-flow negative after all costs. Most sellers find 1–3 SKUs in their catalog that have been losing money on every sale once platform fees and ads are fully allocated — this tracker makes that visible before you scale those SKUs further.
Pairs with Profit Margin Calculator & Markup Calculator
02
Platform Fee Calculator
Side-by-side fee comparison across Shopify, Etsy, Amazon FBA, and WooCommerce at any price point you set: listing/subscription fee allocation per unit, transaction fee percentage, payment processing fee (percentage + fixed), platform-specific add-ons (Etsy offsite ads, Amazon FBA fulfillment tier, Shopify plan fee per transaction), net payout per sale, effective fee rate (total fees ÷ sale price), and break-even price required to hit your target margin on each platform. A second tab lets you enter a single product and see how the payout compares across all four platforms simultaneously — the most useful view when deciding where to list a new SKU or whether to migrate an existing one. The effective fee rate column is the number that changes channel strategy: the difference between a 12% and a 22% effective fee rate on a $40 product is $4 per unit, which at 500 units/month is $2,000 in monthly margin that most sellers never explicitly chose to give up.
Pairs with Profit Margin Calculator & E-Commerce ROAS Calculator
03
ROAS & Ad Spend Tracker
Campaign-level ad performance with real profitability context: campaign name, platform (Meta, Google, TikTok, Pinterest, Amazon PPC), weekly ad spend, revenue attributed, ROAS (revenue ÷ spend), impressions, clicks, CPC (cost per click), conversion rate, orders generated, average order value, blended margin for that SKU/campaign, net profit after ad cost (revenue × margin − spend), break-even ROAS (1 ÷ margin), and a profitable flag (yes if ROAS > break-even ROAS). Weekly rows with a rolling 4-week trend per campaign. The break-even ROAS column is what most sellers are missing: it's not a fixed number, it changes with your margin — and campaigns that look identical at 2.5× ROAS can be profitable on a 50% margin product and loss-making on a 25% margin product. This tracker makes the calculation automatic so you stop optimizing campaigns to ROAS benchmarks that don't account for your actual cost structure.
Pairs with ROAS Calculator & CAC/LTV Calculator
04
Inventory Reorder Planner
Per-SKU reorder management: average daily units sold (30-day rolling), lead time in days (supplier to warehouse/FBA), safety stock days (how many days of buffer you want above lead time), reorder point (daily velocity × (lead time + safety stock days)), current units on hand, days of supply remaining, reorder quantity (based on your target stock level at arrival), supplier name and contact, unit cost at reorder quantity, cash required for this reorder, and a reorder urgency flag (red if days of supply ≤ lead time + safety stock, yellow if within 10 days of that threshold, green if comfortable). A second section tracks slow-moving inventory: SKUs with more than 60 days of supply, monthly storage cost, and a liquidation vs. hold recommendation based on your cost of capital. The cash required column is the one that prevents the cash crunch: most e-commerce businesses discover they have multiple reorders converging in the same 2-week window that requires more working capital than they have available.
Pairs with Break-Even Calculator & Business Cash Flow Calculator
05
Returns Cost Tracker
Return reason tracking by SKU and platform: return date, SKU, platform, return reason (size/fit, defective, not as described, changed mind, damaged in shipping, fraudulent), refund amount, return shipping cost (if seller-paid), restocking cost, inspection and disposition time (minutes × hourly labor rate), resaleable vs. write-off outcome, net loss per return, and a rolling 30-day refund rate per SKU. Summary rows show total return costs by reason, by platform, and by SKU — so you can see whether sizing issues on a specific product are costing more than the product earns, whether a shipping carrier is causing disproportionate damage claims, or whether a single SKU's return rate is high enough to require a listing update or supplier conversation. The return rate by SKU column triggers the real investigation: an 8% return rate on a $40 product isn't just lost revenue, it's $3.20 in direct costs per unit sold on top of the lost margin — compounding against every sale.
Pairs with Profit Margin Calculator & Markup Calculator
06
E-Commerce Cash Flow Planner
Seasonal 12-month cash flow model built for product businesses: monthly revenue forecast (by channel: Shopify, Etsy, Amazon, wholesale, other), COGS (variable with revenue), platform fees (calculated from platform mix and average fee rate), advertising spend (seasonal budget by month), fulfillment and shipping costs, returns provision, inventory purchase outflows (timed to reorder schedule, not revenue — this is the key difference from a standard P&L), monthly net cash flow, and running cash balance. A second section shows the peak cash requirement month (when inventory investment peaks before Q4) and the minimum cash reserve you need to fund operations through your lowest-revenue month without dipping below your safety threshold. The inventory outflow timing column is what separates this from a generic cash flow template: most e-commerce businesses buy inventory 60–90 days before the revenue hits, which creates a predictable cash gap that kills operators who only track profit and ignore the payment timing mismatch.
Pairs with Business Cash Flow Calculator & Break-Even Calculator