Urban Jazz Premium Liquors — Break-Even Analysis

The break-even analysis determines the minimum monthly revenue required to cover all fixed and variable costs, expressed both in Rand value and in daily sales terms.

Urban Jazz Premium Liquors (Pty) Ltd Business Plan › Break-Even Analysis

Section 10 · Business Plan

Break-Even Analysis

The break-even analysis determines the minimum monthly revenue required to cover all fixed and variable costs, expressed both in Rand value and in daily sales terms.

10.1 Monthly Break-Even Calculation

The break-even analysis determines the minimum monthly revenue required to cover all fixed and variable costs, expressed both in Rand value and in daily sales terms.

Component Monthly Amount (R) Notes
Fixed Costs:
Rent 30,000 Per lease agreement
Payroll (incl. statutory) 46,200 Year 1 reduced MD draw
Marketing 20,000 Baseline spend
Utilities 8,000 Electricity, water, connectivity
Insurance 3,000 Annual premium / 12
Other Fixed Costs 6,000 Accounting, legal, technology
Total Fixed Costs 113,200
Variable Costs:
COGS (% of Revenue) 75.0% Year 1 blended average
Shrinkage (% of COGS) 1.5%
Effective Variable Cost % 76.1%
Contribution Margin % 23.9% Revenue less variable costs
Break-Even Revenue 473,640 Fixed Costs / Contribution Margin %
Break-Even Daily Sales 15,788 Assuming 30 trading days/month

10.2 Break-Even Timeline

Based on the projected revenue ramp-up profile, Urban Jazz Premium Liquors is expected to reach monthly operating break-even between Month 7 and Month 9 of trading. The ramp-up assumes the following monthly revenue trajectory:

Month Monthly Revenue (R) Status
Month 1 300,000 Below break-even (grand opening ramp-up)
Month 2 350,000 Below break-even
Month 3 380,000 Below break-even
Month 4 410,000 Below break-even
Month 5 430,000 Below break-even
Month 6 450,000 Approaching break-even
Month 7 470,000 Near break-even
Month 8 490,000 Break-even achieved
Month 9 500,000 Profitable operations
Month 10–12 510,000–530,000 Sustained profitability

10.3 Sensitivity Analysis

The following sensitivity analysis illustrates the impact of key variable changes on the break-even point:

Scenario Gross Margin Monthly Fixed Costs Break-Even Revenue Break-Even Daily Sales
Base Case 25.0% 113,200 473,640 15,788
Higher Margin (+3%) 28.0% 113,200 426,415 14,214
Lower Margin (-3%) 22.0% 113,200 535,849 17,862
Higher Rent (+20%) 25.0% 119,200 498,745 16,625
Reduced Staff (-1 FTE) 25.0% 104,400 436,820 14,561
Worst Case 22.0% 119,200 564,151 18,805
Best Case 28.0% 104,400 393,208 13,107

Even in the worst-case scenario (lower margins and higher fixed costs), the required daily sales of R18,805 remain achievable given the addressable market size and competitive positioning. The best-case scenario demonstrates significant upside potential if the product mix shifts toward higher-margin categories faster than projected.

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