The bottom line on a P&L statement is the least interesting number on the page. By the time you get to net income, you have already passed the numbers that explain it. Founders who only look at whether the number is positive or negative are getting the minimum possible value from a document that, read properly, tells you quite a lot about the structural health of the business.
This guide walks through how a P&L is organized, what each section reveals, and what to look for beyond the number the accountant circles at the bottom.
The Structure of a P&L from Top to Bottom
A P&L (also called an income statement) is organized in a specific sequence. Understanding the order helps you understand why each line is where it is.
Revenue sits at the top and represents your gross sales or gross bookings before any deductions. For subscription businesses, this is the subscription revenue recognized in the period. For project-based businesses, it is the revenue recognized from projects delivered. For product businesses, it is gross sales before returns and allowances. This is the starting point: how much did the business earn from its core operations in this period?
Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) or Cost of Revenue comes directly below revenue and captures the direct costs of delivering your product or service. For a physical product business, COGS includes raw materials, manufacturing labor, and packaging. For a SaaS business, it includes hosting costs, third-party software embedded in the product, and the cost of the customer success team that directly supports customers. The distinction between COGS and operating expenses is important: COGS scales directly with revenue, while operating expenses are more fixed.
Gross Profit is revenue minus COGS. This is one of the most important numbers on the page because it tells you what the business earns before any investment in growth or overhead. Gross profit margin (gross profit divided by revenue) is the primary indicator of business model viability.
Operating Expenses (OpEx) cover everything it costs to run the business that is not directly tied to producing the product: salaries for sales, marketing, G&A, and engineering (in a SaaS context where engineering is not classified as COGS); rent and facilities; software subscriptions for internal tools; marketing spend; and professional services like legal and accounting. These are sometimes called SG&A (Selling, General, and Administrative) expenses.
EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization) is gross profit minus operating expenses, before accounting for interest on debt, taxes, and non-cash accounting items. EBITDA is widely used as a proxy for operating profitability because it removes the effects of financing decisions (interest) and accounting conventions (depreciation and amortization) to show the underlying operational economics of the business.
Net Income is the bottom line after all deductions including interest expense on debt, income taxes, depreciation of physical assets, and amortization of intangible assets. It is the final answer to "how much did the business earn?" But it is shaped by so many accounting choices and financing structures that it is often the last number you should look at, not the first.
What Each Line Reveals About Your Business
Gross margin is the single most important number for understanding whether your business model is viable at scale. Industry benchmarks vary significantly:
- SaaS: 70% to 85% is healthy. Below 60% suggests hosting costs or customer success costs are too high relative to revenue, or that the product is too service-intensive to deliver at scale.
- E-commerce and physical products: 30% to 50% is typical for direct-to-consumer; below 25% is very thin and requires either high volume or a different pricing strategy to reach profitability.
- Marketplace businesses: Gross margin depends heavily on whether the marketplace takes net revenue (its fee) or gross revenue (the full transaction value). Comparing gross margins across marketplace businesses requires understanding how each one reports revenue.
- Professional services: 40% to 60% is common, but highly dependent on utilization rates and whether senior practitioners are doing billable work.
- Manufacturing: 25% to 40% is typical for traditional manufacturing, higher for specialty or differentiated products.
Operating expense ratios reveal whether you are over-staffed, under-investing, or misallocating resources. If your sales and marketing expense is 60% of revenue and your gross margin is 50%, you are clearly not on a path to profitability without fundamental changes to one or both numbers. If your G&A is growing faster than revenue, you are adding overhead faster than you are adding output.
How to Read the P&L Month-Over-Month
Looking at a single month of P&L in isolation tells you very little. The signal is in the direction of each line as a percentage of revenue, tracked over time.
What you want to see: gross margin holding steady or improving as revenue grows (indicating that cost of revenue is not scaling faster than revenue), operating expenses growing more slowly than revenue (indicating operating leverage), and EBITDA margin moving toward positive as the business scales.
What you want to flag immediately: gross margin compression month over month (pricing is eroding, input costs are rising, or the customer mix is shifting toward lower-margin customers), operating expenses growing faster than revenue for more than two or three months without a clear investment rationale (suggesting you are spending ahead of results without the results materializing), and top-line growth masking margin erosion (revenue is growing but the business is becoming less profitable per dollar of revenue, which often signals that growth is being bought at a price that is not sustainable).
Year-Over-Year Comparison
For businesses with meaningful seasonality, month-over-month comparison is insufficient. A retail business that earns 40% of its annual revenue in November and December will always show a terrible January on a month-over-month basis. That is seasonality, not deterioration. Year-over-year comparison for each month (January this year vs. January last year, not January vs. December) is the appropriate tool for seasonal businesses.
For businesses without strong seasonality, the trailing 12-month view, plotted as a line chart, tends to smooth out noise and make trend lines visible. Your accountant or finance tool can produce this view, and it is often more informative than any single period's P&L.
The Cash Flow vs. Profit Confusion
One of the most important things a P&L does not tell you is your cash position. A business can have positive net income and still run out of cash. This happens when customers pay late (accounts receivable sits on the balance sheet, not the P&L), when you have large upcoming obligations that are not yet reflected in expenses, or when you are investing in inventory or other assets that absorb cash before they generate revenue.
The P&L shows you economic performance in an accounting period. The cash flow statement shows you the actual movement of cash into and out of the business. Both are necessary for a complete picture. Founders who focus exclusively on the P&L without looking at the cash flow statement are the ones who are surprised to be "profitable" while running out of money to make payroll.
What to Flag Immediately
Three signals on a P&L that should trigger an immediate conversation with a finance professional:
Gross margin compression. If your gross margin is declining over several consecutive periods, something fundamental is wrong: your pricing is eroding, your input costs are rising faster than your prices, your product delivery is becoming more expensive as you scale, or your customer mix is shifting. Each of these has a different fix, and identifying which one applies requires understanding your business in more detail than a P&L alone can provide.
Operating expenses growing faster than revenue for multiple consecutive periods. One period of this is sometimes intentional (you are investing ahead of a growth initiative). Three or four periods suggests the growth initiative is not producing results, or that there is no investment thesis behind the spending increase at all.
Top-line growth masking bottom-line deterioration. This is the hardest to catch because the revenue line looks healthy. But if margin is compressing while revenue grows, you may be buying growth at a price that is not sustainable. The business looks better than it is from the outside, and worse than it appears from just the revenue line.
When a Finance Expert Helps You Interpret Your Financials
Reading a P&L is a skill, and like most skills, it improves significantly with context. A finance expert who has seen dozens of P&Ls in your industry knows what healthy ratios look like, what warning signs are industry-specific versus universal, and what your numbers suggest about the underlying business dynamics. For most founders, a quarterly review with a finance expert is worthwhile once the business has enough revenue to make the financials meaningful.
For more on working with finance professionals, see the founder's complete guide to financial expertise. To browse finance experts, visit our finance category.
