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Profitability Ratio: Meaning, Types, and Example

Learn what profitability ratios measure, why they matter for business analysis, and which common ratios investors and managers watch most closely.

A profitability ratio is any financial ratio that measures how effectively a company turns revenue, assets, or equity into profit.

These ratios help investors, lenders, and managers judge whether a business model is producing adequate returns and whether margins are strengthening or weakening over time.

Common Profitability Ratios

Widely used profitability ratios include:

Each ratio looks at profit from a slightly different angle.

Why It Matters

A company can grow sales without becoming more profitable. Profitability ratios help answer better questions, such as:

  • Is each dollar of sales becoming more profitable?
  • Is management using assets efficiently?
  • Are shareholders earning a strong return on their capital?

That is why analysts almost always compare profitability ratios across several years and against peer companies.

Worked Example

Suppose a company reports:

  • revenue: $1,000,000
  • operating income: $150,000
  • net income: $90,000
  • average equity: $450,000

Then:

  • operating margin = 15%
  • net profit margin = 9%
  • ROE = 20%

Those numbers together give a much fuller picture than net income alone.

Scenario Question

A manager says, “Profit went up this year, so profitability ratios must also have improved.”

Answer: Not necessarily. If revenue, assets, or equity grew faster than profit, some profitability ratios could stay flat or even worsen.

FAQs

Is a profitability ratio the same as a margin?

Not always. Margins are a subset of profitability ratios. Other profitability ratios compare profit with assets or equity instead of revenue.

Why do analysts use several profitability ratios at once?

Because no single ratio captures every dimension of performance. A company can have a strong margin but weak asset efficiency, or vice versa.

Do profitability ratios work best in isolation?

No. They are most informative when compared across time, peers, and industry norms.
Revised on Monday, May 18, 2026