📦 Operations guide

How to Calculate Cost Per Order

Cost per order (CPO) is the average cost attached to each order fulfilled — the single most useful number for evaluating fulfillment efficiency, pricing pressure, and whether your unit economics are sustainable at scale. This guide covers the full CPO formula, projection formulas, how to express CPO as a percentage of average order value, four worked examples aligned with the calculator's presets, what costs to include, and the most common mistakes.

Last updated: March 31, 2026

What is cost per order?

Cost per order is the total cost required to process and fulfill one order, expressed as a per-unit average. It answers a simple but critical question: "How much does it cost us every time a customer places an order?"

CPO is distinct from the product cost itself. It captures everything that happens operationally after the sale — picking, packing, shipping support, customer service, payment processing, and allocated warehouse overhead. A business can have healthy product margins and still be unprofitable if CPO is too high relative to average order value.

The metric matters most in three scenarios:

  • Scaling up — does CPO fall (efficiency gains) or rise (logistics stress) as volume grows?
  • Comparing channels — does CPO differ between direct, marketplace, and wholesale orders?
  • Pricing decisions — is there enough margin after CPO to support free shipping or discounts?

Cost per order formula

The calculator uses four formulas from two inputs:

Cost Per Order = Total Cost ÷ Total Orders
Projected Cost = CPO × Target Orders
Monthly Cost = CPO × Monthly Order Volume
CPO as % of AOV = (CPO ÷ Avg Order Value) × 100

Full waterfall — ecommerce store preset

Default preset: $4,800 fulfillment cost · 240 orders · target 500 · monthly 300 orders:

$ Total cost (fulfillment) $4,800
÷ Total orders 240 orders
= Cost per order $20.00
Projected cost (500 orders × $20) $10,000
📅 Monthly cost (300 orders × $20) $6,000/mo

The formula is simple — the harder part is deciding which costs go into the numerator and making sure the period matches the denominator.

What costs to include

CPO is most useful when the cost definition is consistent. There is no single right answer — choose the scope that matches your analysis purpose and stick with it across periods. Common approaches:

Fulfillment labor
Picking, packing, and shipping labor allocated to the order period. The largest component for most operations.
Packaging materials
Boxes, poly mailers, void fill, tape, and labels consumed per order period.
Shipping support
Carrier handling fees, last-mile support costs, and inbound shipping for returns if included.
Payment processing
Transaction fees (typically 2–3% of order value). Often tracked separately but sometimes rolled into blended CPO.
Customer service
Support labor allocated to order-related tickets — shipping inquiries, damage claims, delivery exceptions.
Warehouse overhead
Allocated portion of rent, utilities, WMS software, and equipment maintenance for the order period.

Marketing spend (ads, promotions) is typically not included in CPO — that goes into cost per acquisition (CPA) or customer acquisition cost (CAC), which measure different things. The calculator's "paid acquisition" preset uses ad spend as the cost input specifically to calculate marketing CPO separately.

How to calculate cost per order — step by step

1
Choose the period and define the cost scope. Decide whether you are analyzing weekly, monthly, or quarterly data. Choose which cost categories to include — fulfillment only, marketing only, or total blended. Document the definition so comparisons across periods are meaningful.
2
Total the costs for that period. Add up all costs within the defined scope for the exact same period. Example: fulfillment labor $3,200 + packaging $800 + payment fees $800 = $4,800 total.
3
Count the orders for that period. Use net fulfilled orders — gross orders minus cancellations. If returns are significant, decide whether to count returned orders in or out. Example: 240 orders.
4
Divide total cost by total orders. $4,800 ÷ 240 = $20.00 per order.
5
Compare CPO to average order value (AOV). If AOV = $80 and CPO = $20, CPO is 25% of AOV. This ratio is more useful than the raw dollar figure for benchmarking and pricing decisions.
6
Project future costs if needed. CPO × Target Orders gives the expected cost at a new volume. Example: $20 × 500 = $10,000 — useful for budget planning when scaling order volume.

Worked examples

Four scenarios aligned with the calculator's three presets plus a CPO-to-AOV illustration.

Example 1 · Ecommerce store preset

$4,800 fulfillment · 240 orders · AOV $80

Standard weekly crew — typical ecommerce fulfillment cost analysis.

CPO = $4,800 ÷ 240 = $20.00/order
CPO as % of AOV = $20 ÷ $80 = 25%
At 500 orders: $20 × 500 = $10,000

→ 25% CPO-to-AOV. Acceptable if gross margin is 50%+.

Example 2 · Paid acquisition preset

$7,200 ad spend · 360 orders · AOV $65

Marketing CPO — measures cost to acquire each order through paid ads.

CPO = $7,200 ÷ 360 = $20.00/order
CPO as % of AOV = $20 ÷ $65 = 30.8%
At 800 orders: $20 × 800 = $16,000

→ 30.8% marketing CPO. Add to fulfillment CPO for blended view.

Example 3 · Subscription business preset

$3,150 ops cost · 210 orders · monthly 260

Predictable recurring volume — lower CPO from operational consistency.

CPO = $3,150 ÷ 210 = $15.00/order
Monthly cost = $15 × 260 = $3,900/month
At 400 orders: $15 × 400 = $6,000

✓ $15 CPO — lower than ecommerce; subscription economics benefit from predictable volume.

Example 4 · Volume scale effect

Same cost, higher volume → CPO falls

Operations cost holds at $10,000 while order count grows from 500 → 800.

Before: $10,000 ÷ 500 = $20.00/order
After: $10,000 ÷ 800 = $12.50/order
CPO improvement = −$7.50/order (−37.5%)

✓ Fixed cost leverage — the main driver of CPO improvement at scale.

CPO as a percentage of AOV — the key benchmark

A raw CPO dollar figure is hard to benchmark without context. Expressing CPO as a percentage of average order value (AOV) normalizes it — making it comparable across different price points and business models.

CPO as % of AOV = (Cost Per Order ÷ Average Order Value) × 100

Practical benchmarks for ecommerce and DTC businesses:

  • Fulfillment CPO below 15% of AOV — generally healthy for established ecommerce operations
  • Marketing CPO below 25–30% of AOV — sustainable for most direct-to-consumer businesses with decent retention
  • Total blended CPO (fulfillment + marketing) below 40% of AOV — leaves room for product cost, overhead, and profit
  • Blended CPO above 50% of AOV — signals margin pressure; review cost structure or AOV strategy

These are starting points, not hard rules. A business with high retention and strong LTV can afford a higher first-order CPO. A low-margin commodity business needs CPO much lower relative to AOV to stay profitable.

CPO vs cost per item vs customer acquisition cost

Three related metrics that answer different questions — confusing them leads to bad decisions:

Cost per order (CPO)
Average cost to process and fulfill one order transaction. Covers operational costs: labor, packaging, shipping support, warehouse. Use for: fulfillment efficiency, pricing decisions, scaling analysis.
Cost per item (CPI)
Average cost for each unit in an order. One order can contain 3 items — CPO and CPI diverge when basket size varies. Use for: production cost analysis, multi-unit pricing, SKU-level economics.
Customer acquisition cost (CAC)
Marketing and sales spend to win one new customer. Separate from the cost of fulfilling their order. A customer with low CAC and high CPO can still be unprofitable if they only order once. Use for: channel efficiency, LTV:CAC ratio, growth economics.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Mixing cost and order count from different periods. Using this month's cost with last month's order count produces a meaningless number. Always match the period exactly.
  • Changing the cost definition between periods. If you include payment processing fees in Q1 but exclude them in Q2, the trend comparison is misleading. Define the scope once and apply it consistently.
  • Using gross orders instead of net fulfilled orders. Cancellations and returns that consume operational resources but are counted in the denominator inflate the order count and understate true CPO.
  • Reading CPO in isolation from AOV. A $25 CPO sounds high for a $40 AOV business and reasonable for a $150 AOV business. Always express CPO as a percentage of AOV for a meaningful read.
  • Assuming CPO will stay flat at higher volume. Fixed costs (warehouse, WMS, management) give CPO a natural floor — but variable costs (labor, packaging, carrier fees) can rise faster than volume during peak periods. Model CPO at different volumes, not just current rate.

FAQ

What is the formula for cost per order?

Cost Per Order = Total Cost ÷ Total Orders. The full calculator formula set: Projected Cost = CPO × Target Orders. Monthly Cost = CPO × Monthly Volume. CPO as % of AOV = (CPO ÷ Average Order Value) × 100.

What costs should be included in cost per order?

Common inclusions: fulfillment labor, packaging materials, shipping support, payment processing fees, customer service for order-related tickets, and allocated warehouse overhead. Marketing and advertising spend is typically tracked separately as marketing CPO or customer acquisition cost.

Is cost per order the same as cost per item?

No. Cost per order measures the average cost for each order transaction. Cost per item measures the average cost for each unit. When orders contain multiple items, CPO and cost per item diverge — an order with 3 items has 1 CPO but 3 cost-per-item denominator units.

What is a good cost per order for ecommerce?

There is no universal benchmark — it depends on average order value and margins. A practical rule: fulfillment CPO below 15% of AOV is healthy for established operations. Total blended CPO above 50% of AOV typically signals margin pressure requiring review.

Should returns be included in the order count?

It depends on your analysis. For strict fulfillment efficiency, use net fulfilled orders (excluding cancelled before shipment). For total cost accountability, include returns since they consume labor and reverse-logistics cost. Track both versions if returns are a significant share of volume.

Why does CPO fall as order volume increases?

Because fixed costs (warehouse rent, WMS subscriptions, management overhead) are spread across more orders. If $5,000 of fixed costs are divided across 250 orders the fixed CPO component is $20; at 500 orders it falls to $10. Variable costs (packaging, labor per pick) stay roughly flat per order, but the fixed cost leverage is what drives CPO improvement at scale.