Bundle Offer Calculator
Advanced profit modeling with breakeven analysis, sensitivity heatmaps, scenario planning, and full P&L waterfall visualization.
Order Simulation & Costs
Order Distribution
Must total 100%Key Performance Indicators
Profit Waterfall
Revenue Split by Bundle
Cost Composition (% of Revenue)
Breakeven Analysis
Bundle Comparison Matrix
Sensitivity Heatmap — Net Profit
Drag sliders to exploreShows how net profit changes when varying Total Orders (rows) vs. Ad Spend (columns). Current config highlighted.
Price Sensitivity per Bundle
Impact of ±20% price change on each bundle's profit.
COGS Sensitivity per Bundle
Impact of ±30% COGS change on each bundle's margin.
Scenario Planner
Compare your current configuration against optimistic, pessimistic, and custom scenarios side-by-side.
Scenario Comparison
Detailed Profit & Loss Statement
Full BreakdownPer-Order Economics
Monthly / Annual Projections
Smart Product Bundles
Model Your Bundle Profitability — Then Build It in Minutes
Most ecommerce stores launch bundle offers based on guesswork. They pick a price that “feels right,” run ads, and hope the math works out. It usually doesn’t.
This free calculator lets you model up to 3 bundle tiers with every real cost factored in — COGS, shipping, payment fees, fulfillment, ad spend, refunds, and fixed overhead. See your true net profit, breakeven point, ROAS, and per-order economics before you spend a single dollar.
Once you’ve found the bundle configuration that actually makes money, launch it directly in our app — no spreadsheets, no manual setup, no second-guessing.
Understanding Your Results
What is Breakeven Orders? This is the minimum number of orders needed to cover all your fixed costs (ad spend + monthly overhead). Below this number, you’re losing money on every campaign cycle.
What is ROAS? Return on Ad Spend tells you how many dollars of revenue you generate for every dollar spent on ads. A ROAS of 5x means $5 revenue per $1 ad spend. Most profitable ecommerce bundles target a 3x–6x ROAS depending on margins.
What is Contribution Margin? This is your net revenue minus variable costs (COGS + shipping) as a percentage. It tells you how much each sale contributes toward covering fixed costs and generating profit. Healthy bundle offers typically show 50%+ contribution margins.
Net Profit Margin vs. Gross Margin: Gross margin only accounts for COGS. Net margin includes everything — ads, fulfillment, payment fees, packaging, and fixed costs. This calculator shows you both so you don’t fool yourself with inflated gross margin numbers.
Why Bundle Pricing Matters for Ecommerce
Bundle pricing is one of the most effective AOV-boosting strategies in ecommerce, but only when the economics actually work. A “Buy 3 Get Free Shipping” offer sounds great to the customer, but if your COGS per unit is too high or your ad spend eats the margin, you may be selling more while earning less.
The most common mistakes store owners make with bundle offers: pricing bundles based on gut feeling instead of per-unit cost analysis, ignoring payment processing fees that compound at higher price points, underestimating fulfillment and packaging costs for multi-unit orders, and not accounting for higher refund rates on larger orders.
This calculator forces you to confront every line item so you can design bundles that actually grow profit — not just revenue.
Sensitivity Analysis Explained
The sensitivity heatmap shows you what happens to your net profit when two variables change simultaneously — for example, total orders vs. ad spend. Each cell in the grid represents a different scenario with your profit or loss amount.
Green cells mean profit. Red cells mean loss. The current configuration is highlighted with a blue outline. This lets you stress-test your pricing before you commit ad dollars to a campaign.
The price sensitivity and COGS sensitivity panels show you the profit impact of adjusting each bundle’s pricing or supplier costs by up to ±30%. If a 10% COGS increase turns a profitable bundle into a loss, that’s a fragile offer you should reconsider.