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Soap pricing: how to set a price that covers costs and generates profit

TL;DR: The correct price is calculated as: (material + labour + overhead + regulatory costs) / (1 - % margin). Example: lavender soap 85 g with a cost of 162 CZK and 25% margin = 217 CZK. Hand soap does not compete with Dove's price - it targets a different segment. Labour is the most important ingredient.

Pricing is an area where most start-up manufacturers make mistakes - either they set the price too low (undervaluing their own work) or too high without any support in the value of the product. This page provides a specific pricing framework with formulas and examples.

Why hand soap can't compete with industrial soap

Comparison of segments and prices

Industrial soap (Dove, Palmolive) is produced in volumes of millions of units with capital intensity, automation and synthetic components. The purchase price per piece in the shop is 30-60 CZK.

Artisan CP soap with 4-6 weeks of aging, natural oils and individual production can't compete with this price - and shouldn't. These are different segments. A customer who buys a handmade soap for 200 CZK is not buying "soap&#8220they are buying a story, localness, ingredients or a gift experience.

What is the formula for calculating the price?

The five components that make up the selling price

The basic calculation consists of five components:

Price = Material costs + Labour + Overhead + Regulatory costs + Profit margin

1. Cost of Goods Sold (COGS)

It includes everything that physically enters the product or its packaging:

  • Raw materials: oils, NaOH, water, additives, EO/FO, dyes
  • Packaging: paper, label, ribbon, box
  • Consumables: baking paper for moulds, disposable containers

Calculation of raw material costs per piece:

Example for lavender soap (1 kg of oils, yield 10-12 pieces × 85 g):

Raw material Amount Price/kg Cost
Olive oil 500 g 80 CZK/kg CZK 40
Coconut oil 300 g 60 CZK/kg 18 Kč
Castor oil 100 g 180 CZK/kg 18 Kč
Shea butter 100 g 200 CZK/kg CZK 20
NaOH 150 g 50 CZK/kg 7,50 CZK
Lavender EO (3%) 30 g 800 CZK/kg 24 Kč
Packaging (10× paper + label) 5 CZK/piece 50 CZK
Total per batch (10 pieces) 177,50 CZK
Material costs/piece ~17,75 Kč

2. Thesis

Artisan soap production takes 1-3 hours (preparation, production, cleaning) + 10 minutes/piece for packaging. For 1 kg batch:

  • Production: 2 hours × your hourly rate
  • Package (10 pieces): 10 × 10 min = 1.67 hours × rate

What rate? Minimum 200-300 CZK/hour for skilled craft production. A lower rate undervalues your work.

Example at a rate of 250 CZK/hour:

  • Production: 2 h × 250 = 500 CZK
  • Package: 1,67 h × 250 = 418 CZK
  • Total work for the batch: 918 Kč
  • Work/piece: 91,80 CZK

3. Overhead

Includes costs that cannot be allocated to a single product but must be included:

  • Energy (electricity, water): approx. 10-20 CZK per bag
  • Wear and tear of equipment (moulds, mixer, scale - depreciation): approx. 5-10 CZK/ roll
  • Insurance, space rental (if applicable)
  • Health and social insurance for self-employed persons: break down to the expected annual volume

Example: health + social 40 000 CZK/year, 200 bags/year = 200 CZK/bag = 20 CZK/piece.

4. Regulatory costs (amortisation)

CPSR for 10 000 CZK amortized over 3 years at 100 pieces/year = 10 000 / (300 pieces) = 33 CZK/piece.

5. Profit margin

Profit (not income) is what is left after all costs have been deducted. For sustainable production, we recommend a minimum margin of 20-30% of the selling price.

Formula: Selling price = Total cost / (1 – margin %)

Practical example: complete calculation

Lavender soap 85 g - step by step

Folder CZK/piece
Material costs 17,75 Kč
Jobs 91,80 Kč
Directed by CZK 20
Regulatory costs (amort.) 33 Kč
Total cost 162,55 CZK

At 25% margin: 162.55 / (1 – 0.25) = 217 CZK/piece

Recommended selling price: 220-250 CZK (rounding, price anchor).

Different prices for different channels

Wholesale vs. retail

If you supply to stores or spas, the wholesale price is usually 50-60% of the retail price. At retail 220 CZK = wholesale ~100-130 CZK.

Check that the wholesale price still covers your costs and maintains at least a minimum margin.

Warning: Many small manufacturers accept wholesale orders with prices that do not cover their actual costs - they undervalue the work. Do the math up front.

How to use the psychology of price?

Practical techniques

Price anchoring: Offer a variant in different formats (85 g × 1 piece, gift set of 3 pieces). A customer who sees a set for 590 Kč as a "saving&#8220versus 3 × 220 Kč (660 Kč) will buy the set and your margin on the set may be higher.

Premium signal: Price communicates quality. Artisan soap for 99 CZK is questionable for the customer - why so cheap? At 190 Kč it's not premium - it could be supermarket natural cosmetics. At 220-280 Kč it is a clear premium signal.

Price vs. value: Add value (beautiful packaging, story of composition, certificate) and the price of 280 CZK will be acceptable to the customer.

What are the most common mistakes?

The three most dangerous mistakes

Error 1: Failure to include work. "Raw materials cost 20 CZK, I sell for 80 CZK, that's a good margin.“ But 2 hours of work are not included - your real hourly fee is negative.

Error 2: Failure to include regulatory costs. The CPSR for CZK 10,000 must be amortised in the price of the product.

Error 3: Comparison with industrial soap. Premium segment customers don't look at Dove's price - they look at competing artisanal manufacturers.

Error 4: Discount as default. If you always sell at a discount, the base price loses credibility. Use discounts strategically (Black Friday, loyalty program, season).

Prices for individual sales channels

Comparisons and strategies

Channel Recommended price Note
Own e-shop 100% retail Full margin
Farmers' Market 100% retail Direct contact increases sales
Etsy / Folksy 100% + fees (approximately 10%) Include platform fees
Instagram / TikTok shop 100% + fulfillment Keep an eye on transport costs
Wholesale (shops, spa) 50-60% retail Check the margin
Gift sets 110-120 % of the value of the pieces Premium packaging = higher value

Frequently asked questions

What margin should I have? At least 20-25% to cover all costs. Ideally 30% for a healthy reserve and reinvestment.

If a competitor sells lavender for 150 CZK, should I look? Not necessarily. It may be an inferior product quality, or the manufacturer undercutting their work. Stick to your calculation - if it covers your costs, your price is right.

How should the price differ online vs. physically on the market? The price should be the same. Online you have higher shipping costs, physically you have time costs. It compensates.

What if I don't want to bid up the price, but I want a higher margin? Reduce costs: more efficient production (more pieces per batch), cheaper packaging, lower energy costs. But never compromise on quality or your work.

As a beginner, I'm afraid to set the price too high. What should I do? Calculate your calculation using this guide. Then check it with other manufacturers or a mentor. Trust your numbers - they're not just your words, they're your costs.

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