
02 Feb The Number That Can Save (or Sink) Your Bakery Café
Your bakery café can be full.
The ovens can be running nonstop.
Your team can be busy from open to close.
And still—
you can be losing money.
That’s because in bakery cafés, there’s an uncomfortable truth:
Being busy does not mean being profitable.
There is one number that removes guesswork, intuition, and the feeling of “I think we’re
doing fine.”
That number puts reality on the table.
It’s called the break-even point.
What Is the Break-Even Point?
The break-even point is the exact level of sales where your bakery café:
Covers all operating costs
Does not lose money
Has not made a profit yet
Until you reach this point, every croissant, coffee, and sandwich is simply paying bills.
Profit only begins after break-even is reached.
The Most Common Mistake Bakery Owners Make
Most bakery café owners do not fully understand their true costs.
Without that knowledge, decisions about pricing, operating hours, promotions, and
staffing become educated guesses at best—and costly mistakes at worst.
To calculate your break-even point, you must clearly separate two types of costs:
Fixed Costs
These expenses exist whether you sell one item or one thousand:
Rent
Gas and electricity
Internet and POS systems
Insurance and licenses
Equipment and oven maintenance
Variable Costs
These costs rise and fall based on production:
Flour, butter, eggs, sugar
Coffee, milk, packaging
Labor hours
Waste and spoilage
When fixed and variable costs are mixed together, profit quietly disappears without
notice.
The Margin That Actually Matters
Profit is not determined by how much you charge—it’s determined by how much you
keep after producing each item.
This is called the contribution margin.
It is the portion of each sale that goes toward paying fixed costs and, eventually,
generating profit.
A Simple Example: Artisan Bakery Café
Average ticket (coffee + baked good): $8
Direct cost (ingredients and preparation): $3
Contribution margin per sale: $5
Monthly fixed costs:
- Rent
- Utilities
- Software
- Insurance
Total fixed costs: $4,000
Break-even calculation:
$4,000 ÷ $5 = 800 sales
What does this mean?
- The first 800 sales only cover expenses
- Sale #801 is the first sale that creates real profit
Before that point, the bakery café is simply surviving.
What Happens When the Math Is Ignored
One local bakery café sold about 1,200 items per month.
There was always a line. The shop felt busy and successful.
But the numbers told a different story:
Contribution margin per sale: $1.50
Monthly fixed costs: $4,500
Break-even point: 3,000 sales
They were selling 1,200 items—less than half of what was required.
The issue was not marketing.
It was not foot traffic.
It was a margin problem.
The café closed fourteen months later.
What Changes When the Numbers Are Clear
Another bakery café was barely earning $600 per month, which was unsustainable.
What changed?
They calculated their break-even point
Adjusted pricing strategically
Optimized recipes and portion sizes
They didn’t work longer hours.
They didn’t chase more customers.
They made better decisions.
The Question Every Owner Should Ask
It’s not:
“How many coffees did I sell today?”
It is:
“How many sales do I need this month to be profitable?”
If you don’t know your break-even point, you’re not managing your bakery café—you’re reacting to it.
Profitability Is Not a Feeling
It’s a calculation.
And once you understand it, the business stops draining you—and starts working for
you.
If this made you pause and think, that’s a very good sign.
If this article made you stop and think, that’s a very good sign.
Call 773-257-0911 or visit optimumchicago.com.
For clear, practical advice all year long, follow Cuentas Claras with Gerry—where numbers turn into strategy.
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