Calculator

Average Order Value Calculator

Average order value is one of the fastest ways to understand whether revenue is growing through more orders, better orders, or both.

Result

Average Order Value

Calculate average order value from total revenue and total orders.

Average order value turns your order history into a simpler pricing and forecasting benchmark.

Average order value
$125.00
Revenue per 100 orders
$12,500.00
Order count
100

Breakdown

Plain-English math so the result stays easy to explain.

  • Total revenue
    $12,500.00
  • Order count
    100

Revenue

Average Order Value Calculator

Average order value is one of the fastest ways to understand whether revenue is growing through more orders, better orders, or both.

This calculator helps sellers turn total revenue and order count into a clean average order value they can use in forecasting and pricing decisions.

How to use this page

Start with your best current estimate, adjust the inputs until the result feels realistic, and use the related tools below when you want to pressure-test price, profit, or payout from another angle.

Calculate average order value from total revenue and total orders.

The calculator, examples, and shareable URL all stay aligned so you can test ideas quickly and revisit them later.

Related calculators

Keep moving through the launch pages without rewriting your pricing math.

Worked examples

Start from a realistic scenario

Each example opens the same calculator with shareable URL state.

Monthly store AOV

A simple average order value check from total revenue and order count.

$125.00average order value

Load this example

Higher-value offer mix

A smaller order count with larger transactions can materially lift AOV.

$197.83average order value

Load this example

Last updated

April 18, 2026

This page was reviewed for clarity and consistency.

FAQ

Quick answers

Short answers for the questions that usually come up first.

Why does average order value matter so much?

Because it affects revenue growth, ad efficiency, bundle strategy, and the number of orders needed to hit a goal.

Should refunds be removed first?

If you want a cleaner planning number, using net revenue instead of gross revenue usually gives a more realistic average order value.