If you're a new Etsy seller, here's a hard truth: most shop owners don't know their true product cost.
Sure, you know materials cost $5. But what about:
- Your labor (2 hours at $15/hr = $30)
- Etsy's 6.5% fee + $0.20 listing
- Payment processing ~3% + $0.25
- Shipping supplies ($0.50)
- Overhead (tools, electricity, marketing ~15%)
- Returns/refunds buffer (5%)
Add that up? That $10 item costs you $38. At $25 price, you're LOSING $13 per sale. That's why 80% of Etsy sellers fail within the first year.
How to fix it:
Track everything. Every material, every minute, every fee. Use a spreadsheet—not mental math.
Know your minimum price. Formula: Price = (Total Cost) / (1 - Desired Margin). If you want 50% margin and cost is $10, price = $20.
Check your profit margin. Not just "I made $100" but "my net profit is 40%". Track this weekly if you're serious.
Use batch pricing. Making 50 items vs 10 items reduces per-unit cost. Your spreadsheet should calculate this automatically.
Adjust based on data. After 30 days, review your actual costs vs projections. Etsy fees add up—they're not just 6.5%.
A practical tool
I created a free spreadsheet template that does all the math for you (there's a paid version with batch calculator and dashboard, but the basic cost calculator is free to use).
[Link to Gumroad] — costs $0 for the basic version.
The key insight? Once you know your numbers, you'll stop underselling yourself. And your Etsy shop will actually be profitable.
Try it out and let me know if it helps. Drop questions below – happy to help sellers nail their pricing.
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