Free Cookie Pricing Calculator
Enter your ingredients, decorating time, and overhead to find out exactly what to charge per cookie — and per dozen.
Cookie Pricing Calculator
Four Numbers. One Real Price.
Ingredient Cost
Add up everything in the batch — flour, butter, eggs, vanilla, food coloring, royal icing ingredients, sprinkles, and any flavoring.
Labor
How long does the full batch take start to finish — mixing, baking, cooling, icing, decorating? Multiply by your hourly rate.
Packaging
Include bags, boxes, ribbon, tissue paper, stickers, and anything else you use to present the cookies beautifully.
Profit Margin
The percentage on top of costs that you actually keep. Most home bakers aim for 25–40% on cookie orders.
2 Dozen Custom Decorated Cookies
Built For Cookie Decorators, Not Cookie Factories
Counts Your Decorating Time
Royal icing cookies can take 30+ minutes per cookie. This calculator makes sure you price the artistry, not just the baking.
Shows Per Cookie And Per Dozen
Customers ask both ways. See both numbers instantly so you can quote confidently without calculating in your head mid-conversation.
Includes Packaging
That cute bag, the tissue paper, the ribbon, the thank-you sticker — those costs belong in the price. This calculator doesn’t let you forget them.
Real Profit Built In
The profit margin field ensures you keep money after covering every cost — not just breaking even on supplies and time.
Made By A Real Baker
Created by Marcia Dexter, who has priced hundreds of custom cookie orders and knows exactly where bakers undersell themselves.
Completely Free
No login, no email, no credit card. Just open the calculator, enter your batch numbers, and get a real price per cookie in seconds.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I price decorated cookies?
Add up your ingredient cost, multiply your total time by your hourly rate, include packaging, then add your profit margin. The tricky part is making sure you count decorating time — not just baking time. This calculator handles all of that math.
What should I charge per cookie?
There is no universal price — it depends on your costs, your time, your level of detail, and your market. That’s exactly why you should run your actual numbers instead of copying what someone else charges in a different city.
Should I charge by the cookie or by the dozen?
Both are common. Having both numbers lets you quote whichever way a customer asks. Most home bakers find it easier to quote per dozen for set orders, and per cookie for single-piece requests.
What profit margin should I use for cookies?
Most home bakers aim for 25–40%. If you are just starting out, 25% is a solid minimum. Custom decorated cookies with intricate detail can justify 35–40% because the artistry commands a premium.
What should I include in ingredient cost?
Every ingredient that goes into the batch — flour, butter, eggs, sugar, vanilla, meringue powder, gel food coloring, luster dust, flavoring, and any specialty ingredients. Track it to the actual recipe, not a round guess.
What counts as packaging and overhead?
Bags, boxes, ribbon, heat sealers, tissue paper, stickers, and labels. Also include a proportional share of electricity (the oven run time) and any equipment that wears out with use.
Take Your Pricing Further With BatterSuite
This free calculator gives you a price per batch. BatterSuite is the full bakery management system — store your recipes with saved ingredient costs, attach them to orders, and see your profit before you confirm a single cookie.
Ready To Stop Guessing Your Cookie Prices?
Use the free calculator above, then grab the Sweet Start Pricing Kit to go even deeper on costs, labor, and profit for your home bakery.