In AP Business, gross profit is the money a business has left over from sales revenue after paying the direct costs of making its product. It shows how much room a seller has between the price buyers pay and what the goods cost to produce.
Gross profit is revenue minus the direct cost of producing the goods or services you sell. If you sell a backpack for $40 and it costs $25 in materials and labor to make, your gross profit is $15. That's the slice of each sale left over before you pay for everything else (rent, marketing, salaries).
This connects directly to how markets work in AP Business. When sellers and buyers interact, sellers want higher prices to gain profit and buyers want lower prices to save money (EK 1.2.A.3). Gross profit is exactly where that tug-of-war shows up. A higher selling price or a lower production cost widens your gross profit. The market price that settles between buyer and seller sets the top end of that gap, and the seller's costs set the bottom.
Gross profit lives in Unit 1 under Topic 1.2, Markets and Competitive Advantage. It supports AP Business 1.2.A, which asks you to explain how sellers and buyers interact to establish a market price, and 1.2.B, which asks you to evaluate a business's plan for competitive advantage. The whole point of competitive advantage (EK 1.2.B.1) is outperforming rivals, and one of the clearest signs you're doing that is a healthy gross profit. If you can charge more or produce for less than your competitors, your gross profit reflects it. That makes this term a useful link between abstract market theory and the real numbers a business actually tracks.
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view galleryCompetitive Advantage (Unit 1)
Competitive advantage is the ability to outperform rivals, and gross profit is one way that advantage becomes visible. A business that can produce cheaply or command higher prices keeps a wider gap between revenue and cost, which is exactly what a strong competitive position lets you do.
Differentiated Product (Unit 1)
When you sell a differentiated product with features rivals can't match, buyers will pay more for it. That higher price stretches your gross profit, which is why differentiation is a go-to strategy for protecting margins instead of competing on price alone.
Competitive Pricing (Unit 1)
In a crowded market where rivals offer similar goods, businesses get pushed toward lower prices to win buyers. Competitive pricing squeezes gross profit, so the more identical the products, the thinner the gap between price and cost tends to be.
No released FRQ has used "gross profit" verbatim, but the idea behind it shows up whenever a prompt asks you to evaluate a business's plan for competitive advantage (1.2.B). Expect to reason about how a seller's costs and prices interact to leave room for profit. On free-response questions you may need to explain why a differentiation or low-cost strategy improves a business's profitability, and gross profit is the concept that connects "charge more or spend less" to "keep more." Multiple-choice stems in Unit 1 often test whether you understand that sellers want higher prices and buyers want lower ones, with profit sitting in the difference.
Revenue is all the money you bring in from sales. Gross profit is what's left of that revenue after you subtract the direct cost of making the product. So revenue is the top line and gross profit is a smaller number underneath it. If you sell $1,000 worth of goods that cost $600 to produce, revenue is $1,000 and gross profit is $400.
Gross profit equals sales revenue minus the direct cost of producing the goods or services sold.
It captures the seller-versus-buyer tension in EK 1.2.A.3, where sellers push prices up and buyers push them down.
A wider gross profit usually signals competitive advantage, since you're either charging more or producing for less than rivals.
Differentiated products tend to protect gross profit because buyers pay a premium for features rivals lack.
Highly competitive markets with similar products squeeze gross profit by forcing prices down.
Gross profit is the money a business keeps after subtracting the direct cost of making its product from its sales revenue. In Unit 1, it shows the gap between the price buyers pay and what the goods cost to produce.
No. Revenue is the total money from sales, while gross profit is what's left after you subtract production costs. If you earn $1,000 in revenue and spend $600 making the goods, your gross profit is $400.
A business with competitive advantage can charge higher prices or produce more cheaply than rivals, both of which widen gross profit. So a strong gross profit is often a sign that a company is outperforming its competition, which is the core of EK 1.2.B.1.
Differentiated products have features rivals can't easily copy, so buyers are willing to pay more for them. That higher price stretches the gap between revenue and cost, which raises gross profit instead of forcing the business to compete on price.
The exact term may not appear word-for-word, but the reasoning behind it is fair game in Unit 1, especially when a question asks you to evaluate how a business builds competitive advantage or sets prices in a market.
Connect this key term to the AP exam workflow: review the course, practice questions, and check related study tools.