Gross margin is the number on your P&L. Contribution margin is the number that tells you whether you are actually making money on each customer. The difference matters enormously for decision-making. Here is the complete contribution margin framework for D2C brands.
Contribution Margin vs Gross Margin
Gross margin subtracts only Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) from revenue. It does not include shipping, payment processing, or any variable costs tied to selling each unit. A 60 percent gross margin on a $50 product means $30 per unit before any other variable cost.
Contribution margin subtracts all variable costs associated with selling and delivering each unit. For D2C: COGS, outbound shipping, packaging, payment processing (typically 2.5 to 3 percent of sale), returns processing (weighted average cost per unit, accounting for your return rate), and any variable customer acquisition cost. Contribution margin is what actually remains to pay for fixed costs and generate profit.
Example: $60 product, COGS $18, shipping $7, packaging $2, payment processing $1.80, returns ($3 weighted average for a 5 percent return rate), total variable cost = $31.80. Contribution Margin 1 (CM1) = $60 - $31.80 = $28.20 (47 percent). Gross margin looks like 70 percent. Actual contribution margin is 47 percent. Decision-making based on gross margin alone overstates profitability by 23 percentage points.
Contribution Margin 2: After Marketing
Contribution Margin 2 (CM2) subtracts your variable marketing spend (customer acquisition cost) from CM1. If your CAC is $35 and your CM1 is $28.20, your CM2 is -$6.80. You are losing money on every customer acquired on the first order. This is not automatically a problem if your LTV is high enough, but it is critical information for cash flow planning and scaling decisions.
CM2 by channel: calculate CM2 separately for Meta-acquired customers, Google-acquired customers, and organic customers. Organic customers have CM2 equal to CM1 (no acquisition cost). Meta customers have CM2 = CM1 minus Meta CAC. Understanding which channels have positive CM2 tells you which acquisition channels to invest in and which to fix before scaling.
Using Contribution Margin for Decisions
Pricing decisions: if you are considering a 10 percent price increase, the contribution margin impact is direct. On a $60 product at 47 percent CM, a 10 percent increase to $66 raises CM1 to $34.20 (51.8 percent) assuming COGS and variable costs stay fixed. That is a 21 percent increase in contribution per unit. If the price increase reduces order volume by 5 percent, you are still better off. Calculate before deciding.
Channel investment decisions: if your Meta CM2 is negative but your Google CM2 is positive, shifting marginal budget from Meta to Google improves overall profitability even if Meta drives higher volume. Volume does not matter if the margin on that volume is negative.
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