Profit and Loss Statement: How to Read and Use Your P&L
A profit and loss statement (P&L)—also called an income statement—summarizes a company’s revenues, costs, and expenses over a specific period to show whether the business made a profit or a loss. It’s one of the three essential financial statements and the first place most investors and business owners look to assess the immediate financial performance of an entity.
The P&L answers a fundamental question: *Did the business make money during this period?*
The Structure of a P&L Statement
Every P&L follows the same basic structure – revenue at the top, expenses subtracted in sequence, with the final number being net income (profit) or net loss.
| Line Item | Formula / Description |
|---|---|
| Revenue (Sales) | Total income from products/services sold |
| − Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) | Direct costs of producing goods/services |
| = Gross Profit | Revenue − COGS |
| − Operating Expenses | Salaries, rent, marketing, utilities, etc. |
| = Operating Income (EBIT) | Gross Profit − Operating Expenses |
| − Interest Expense | Cost of debt |
| + Interest Income | Income from cash/investments |
| = Pre-tax Income (EBT) | EBIT ± Interest |
| − Income Tax Expense | Taxes owed on income |
| = Net Income | The “bottom line” |
Sample P&L Statement
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Revenue | $500,000 |
| Cost of Goods Sold | ($200,000) |
| Gross Profit | $300,000 |
| Operating Expenses | ($180,000) |
| Operating Income (EBIT) | $120,000 |
| Interest Expense | ($15,000) |
| Pre-Tax Income | $105,000 |
| Income Tax (25%) | ($26,250) |
| Net Income | $78,750 |
Key Profit Margins to Calculate
| Margin | Formula | What It Shows |
|---|---|---|
| Gross margin | Gross Profit / Revenue | Profitability of core production |
| Operating margin | Operating Income / Revenue | Efficiency of business operations |
| Net profit margin | Net Income / Revenue | Overall profitability after all expenses |
| EBITDA margin | EBITDA / Revenue | Cash-generating efficiency |
In our example:
- Gross margin = $300K / $500K = 60%
- Operating margin = $120K / $500K = 24%
- Net margin = $78.75K / $500K = 15.75%
P&L vs Balance Sheet vs Cash Flow Statement

| Statement | What It Shows | Period |
|---|---|---|
| P&L (Income Statement) | Profitability | Over a time period |
| Balance Sheet | Financial position (assets, liabilities, equity) | At a point in time |
| Cash Flow Statement | Actual cash movement | Over a time period |
The P&L shows profit; the balance sheet shows what you own and owe; the cash flow statement shows real money movement. You need all three to fully understand a business.
Common P&L Red Flags
- Gross margin declining – rising COGS or pricing pressure
- Revenue growing but operating income shrinking – expense growth outpacing revenue
- Net income positive but operating income negative – profits driven by one-time items
- High revenue, low margins – competitive pressure or poor pricing strategy
The Bottom Line
The profit and loss statement is the scorecard of business performance. Read it top-down: start with revenue growth, then check gross margin, then operating efficiency, then net income. Each layer tells you something different about how well the business is actually working.





