Pretax Earnings

Pretax Earnings

Pretax earnings is a company's income after all operating expenses, including interest and depreciation, have been deducted from total sales or revenues, but before income taxes have been subtracted. The after-tax earnings figure, or net income, is computed by deducting corporate income taxes from pretax earnings of $10 million. Pretax earnings are a company's income left over after all operating expenses, including interest and depreciation, have been deducted from total sales or revenues, but before income taxes have been subtracted. Pretax earnings is a company's income after all operating expenses, including interest and depreciation, have been deducted from total sales or revenues, but before income taxes have been subtracted. The pretax earnings margin is the ratio of a company's pre-tax earnings to its total sales.

Pretax earnings are a company's income left over after all operating expenses, including interest and depreciation, have been deducted from total sales or revenues, but before income taxes have been subtracted.

What Are Pretax Earnings?

Pretax earnings is a company's income after all operating expenses, including interest and depreciation, have been deducted from total sales or revenues, but before income taxes have been subtracted. Because pretax earnings exclude taxes, this measure enables the intrinsic profitability of companies to be compared across industries or geographic regions where corporate taxes differ. For instance, while U.S.-based corporations face the same tax rates at the federal level, they face different tax rates at the state level.

Also known as pretax income or earnings before tax (EBT).

Pretax earnings are a company's income left over after all operating expenses, including interest and depreciation, have been deducted from total sales or revenues, but before income taxes have been subtracted.
Pretax earnings provide insight into a company's financial performance before the impact of taxes.
Many consider pre-tax earnings as a more accurate measure of business performance and health over time.

How Pretax Earnings Work

A company’s pretax earnings provides insight into its financial performance before the impact of tax is employed. Some consider this metric a better measure of performance than net income because certain factors such as tax credits, carry forwards, and carry backs, can have a bearing on a company’s tax expenses in a given year. Pretax earnings is calculated by subtracting a firm’s operating expenses from its gross margin or revenue. Operating expenses include items such as depreciation, insurance, interest, and regulatory fines. For example, a manufacturer with revenues of $100 million in a fiscal year may have $90 million in total operating expenses (including depreciation and interest expenses), excluding taxes. In this case, pretax earnings amount to $10 million. The after-tax earnings figure, or net income, is computed by deducting corporate income taxes from pretax earnings of $10 million.

Businesses may prefer tracking pre-tax earnings over net income as items such as tax deductions and employee benefits paid in one period may differ from another period. In effect, the pre-tax earnings is viewed as a more consistent measure of business performance and fiscal health over time, because it erases the volatile differences brought on by tax considerations.

Pretax Earnings Margin

Pretax earnings is used by analysts and investors to calculate the pretax earnings margin, which provides an indication of a company’s profitability. The pretax earnings margin is the ratio of a company's pre-tax earnings to its total sales. The higher the pretax profit margin, the more profitable the company.

For example, assume Company ABC has an annual gross profit of $100,000. It has operating expenses of $50,000, interest expenses of $10,000, and sales totaling $500,000. The pretax earnings is calculated by subtracting the operating and interest costs from the gross profit, that is, $100,000 - $60,000 = $40,000. For the given fiscal year (FY), the pretax earnings margin is $40,000 / $500,000 = 8%.

But Company XYZ which has $750,000 in sales and $50,000 in pretax earnings has a higher profitability than Company ABC in dollars. However, XYZ has a lower pretax earnings margin of $50,000 / $750,000 = 6.7%.

Pretax Earnings Vs. Taxable Income

The pretax earnings is shown on a company’s income statements as Earnings Before Taxes. It is the amount on which the corporate tax rate is applied to calculate tax for financial statement purposes. Pretax earnings is determined using guidelines from the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP). Taxable income, on the other hand, is calculated using tax codes governed by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). It is the actual amount of income on which the corporation will pay income tax during the accounting period.

Related terms:

After-Tax Return on Sales

After-tax return on sales is a profitability measure that indicates how well a company uses its sales revenue. read more

Corporate Tax

A corporate tax is tax on the profits of a corporation that generate revenue for a government. read more

Depreciation

Depreciation is an accounting method of allocating the cost of a tangible asset over its useful life and is used to account for declines in value over time. read more

Earnings Before Interest and Taxes (EBIT) & Formula

Earnings before interest and taxes is an indicator of a company's profitability and is calculated as revenue minus expenses, excluding taxes and interest. read more

Earnings Before Tax (EBT)

Earnings before tax (EBT), calculated as revenue minus expenses excluding taxes, measures a company's financial performance. read more

Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP)

GAAP is a common set of generally accepted accounting principles, standards, and procedures that public companies in the U.S. must follow when they compile their financial statements. read more

Loss Carryback

Loss carryback occurs when a business has a net operating loss and applies that loss against a preceding year's tax bill, resulting in a refund. read more

Loss Carryforward

Loss carryforward is an accounting technique that applies current year net operating losses to future years' profits in order to reduce tax liability. read more

Net of Tax

Net of tax is an accounting figure that has been adjusted for the effects of income tax.  read more

Net Profit Margin

Expressed as a percentage, the net profit margin shows how much of each dollar collected by a company as revenue translates into profit. read more