Profit First Allocation Calculator — Michalowicz TAPs
Last reviewed:
Auto-detect your Profit First revenue tier (A through E) and see exactly how much of each month's Real Revenue belongs in Profit, Owner's Pay, Tax, and Operating Expenses bank accounts.
Profit First splits real revenue into four buckets. For most small service businesses, ten percent profit, thirty-five percent owner pay, fifteen percent tax, forty percent operating expenses.
How it works
Mike Michalowicz's Profit First system reverses the standard Sales − Expenses = Profit equation. Instead, profit is taken first: Sales − Profit = Expenses. Each month, you allocate Real Revenue (gross revenue minus materials and subcontractors that pass through) across four separate bank accounts according to Target Allocation Percentages (TAPs) for your revenue tier.
The calculator auto-detects your tier from annual Real Revenue (monthly × 12). Tier A businesses ($0-$250k) allocate 50% to Owner's Pay because the owner IS the business. Tier D businesses ($1M-$5M) allocate only 10% to Owner's Pay because the team carries the work and OpEx legitimately needs the headcount — the percentages scale with operational maturity.
Common mistakes
- Skipping Real Revenue. For a contractor or e-commerce business with 40% materials, allocating against gross revenue puts you 40% over budget on everything. Always compute Real Revenue first.
- Adopting target TAPs immediately. Michalowicz recommends gradual transition — start at your current allocation pattern and shift 1-3 percentage points per quarter toward the target. Going from 0% profit to 5% overnight breaks operations and triggers spending-cuts panic.
- Treating tax as optional. The Tax account is the one most owners raid in tight months. Touching it creates the IRS-quarterly-payment problem every freelance accountant warns about. Use a separate institution if needed to add friction.
- Aggregating accounts. The system relies on multiple physical bank accounts forcing the allocation discipline. Calculating allocations on a spreadsheet while keeping one mixed account defeats the behavioural mechanism Profit First depends on.
See the formula
Real Revenue = Top-Line Revenue − (Materials + Subcontractor Pass-Through) Tier A ($0-$250k annual RR): Profit 5% Owner Pay 50% Tax 15% OpEx 30% Tier B ($250k-$500k): Profit 10% Owner Pay 35% Tax 15% OpEx 40% Tier C ($500k-$1M): Profit 15% Owner Pay 20% Tax 15% OpEx 50% Tier D ($1M-$5M): Profit 10% Owner Pay 10% Tax 15% OpEx 65% Tier E ($5M-$10M): Profit 15% Owner Pay 5% Tax 15% OpEx 65% Example: $30,000/mo revenue, 15% materials Real Revenue = $30,000 × 0.85 = $25,500/mo Annual Real Revenue = $306,000 → Tier B Profit: $2,550/mo Owner Pay: $8,925/mo Tax: $3,825/mo OpEx: $10,200/mo
Worked example
A graphic design studio runs $30,000/month in revenue. 15% goes to subcontractors (freelance designers used for overflow capacity). Real Revenue = $30,000 × 0.85 = $25,500/month. Annualised: $306,000 → Tier B.
Tier B TAPs: Profit 10%, Owner's Pay 35%, Tax 15%, OpEx 40%. Monthly allocations: Profit $2,550, Owner's Pay $8,925, Tax $3,825, OpEx $10,200. The Profit account is touched only quarterly — half distributed to the owner as a profit bonus, half saved as a reserve. Owner's Pay funds the owner's monthly draw. Tax funds quarterly 1040-ES payments. OpEx covers everything else: rent, software, marketing, occasional contractors above subcontractor allocation.
What if OpEx of $10,200 is too tight given current $14,000/month expenses? Three options. (1) Cut expenses to fit — the entire point of Profit First, force the constraint. (2) Increase Real Revenue — same allocations work better at $36,000/month gross. (3) Phase in: start at current allocation, shift 1-2 percentage points per quarter toward target until you reach Tier B levels in 12-18 months. Michalowicz strongly recommends path 3 — overnight cuts usually fail.
When to use this calculator
Use this when you are adopting the Profit First system for the first time, when annual revenue crosses into a new tier and the target percentages should shift, or when you want a single monthly bank-allocation rhythm rather than a profit-and-loss-driven owner draw. It is built for owner-operated small businesses where cash discipline matters more than accounting nuance.
If you are pricing a service rather than allocating revenue, the Freelance Rate Calculator is the better starting point. To check whether the bank balance and the income statement actually agree, run the Cash Flow Calculator alongside this allocation view.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Profit First?
What is Real Revenue?
What are the Profit First Target Allocation Percentages?
Why does Owner's Pay drop as revenue grows?
How do I transition to Profit First?
Do I need separate bank accounts?
What happens to the Profit account?
Does Profit First work for businesses with thin margins?
What if my tax rate is higher than 15%?
Is Profit First a substitute for accounting?
Glossary
- Real Revenue
- Top-line revenue minus pass-through costs like materials and subcontractors. The base for Profit First allocations.
- TAPs
- Target Allocation Percentages — the share of Real Revenue assigned to each account at your tier.
- Profit Distribution
- The quarterly transfer from the Profit account to the owner. Half is paid as a bonus, half kept as reserve.
Related calculators
Methodology & sources
Rates last verified: May 2026Uses the canonical TAPs from Mike Michalowicz's Profit First (revised 2017 edition). Tier definitions are based on annual Real Revenue (monthly × 12), not gross revenue. Most service businesses sit in Tiers A-C; Tiers D-E require operational maturity and team scale. Real Revenue formula subtracts materials and subcontractors only — internal employees count as OpEx, not Real Revenue reduction.
Rates are reviewed annually or when a region changes its headline rate. If you spot one that's out of date, email [email protected].
For information only. This calculator does not constitute financial, accounting, or tax advice. Consult a qualified professional before making business decisions.
Try these scenarios
Pre-filled examples — click any chip to load the inputs and result.
How to calculate Profit First monthly allocations
- Enter monthly top-line revenueGross revenue before any deductions.
- Enter materials & subcontractors percentagePass-through costs that aren't your money to allocate.
- Read the auto-detected tierThe calculator picks Tier A-E from annual Real Revenue.
- Apply allocations to separate bank accountsThe behavioural mechanism depends on physical account separation, not just spreadsheet math.
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Written by
James BlanckenbergFounder, BusCalcTools
Founder of BusCalcTools and FinnCalc. Builds practical financial calculators for small business owners and freelancers across the US, UK, and South Africa.
Editorial review by: James Blanckenberg, Founder & Editor
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