Calculator

Landed Cost Calculator

Use this when freight and import charges matter enough that supplier cost alone no longer tells the whole story.

Result

Landed Cost

Estimate landed cost per unit from supplier cost, freight, duty, and unit count.

Landed cost is strongest as a per-unit metric because freight and import charges rarely matter until they are spread across the shipment.

Landed cost per unit
$15.00
Total landed cost
$3,000.00
Freight and duty total
$600.00

Breakdown

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

  • Supplier cost
    $2,400.00
  • Freight cost
    $450.00
  • Duty and import cost
    $150.00
  • Units
    200

Save locally

Keep this calculator handy

Favorites and saved setups stay on this device. No account needed.

Saved items appear on the Favorites page from this device.

Costs

Landed Cost Calculator

Use this when freight and import charges matter enough that supplier cost alone no longer tells the whole story.

This calculator helps sellers spread freight and import cost across a shipment so unit economics stay realistic.

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.

Estimate landed cost per unit from supplier cost, freight, duty, and unit count.

Use the calculator with the examples below to test ideas quickly and come back to the same setup 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.

Imported inventory batch

A shipment-level cost spread across the units in the order.

$15.00landed cost per unit

Load this example

FAQ

Quick answers

Short answers for the questions that usually come up first.

When should I use the landed cost calculator?

This calculator helps sellers spread freight and import cost across a shipment so unit economics stay realistic.

Is this meant for exact accounting, tax filing, or bookkeeping?

No. It is a planning calculator built around your inputs so you can sanity-check pricing, profit, or cash decisions quickly.