EBITDA margin explained: what it shows and what it misses
EBITDA margin can help compare operating profitability, but it excludes important costs and should not be treated as cash flow.
What EBITDA margin measures
EBITDA margin is EBITDA divided by revenue. EBITDA stands for earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization. The margin shows how much operating profit proxy a company produces for each dollar of revenue before those excluded items.
It is often used to compare operating profitability across companies with different financing, tax, and depreciation profiles.
Why analysts use it
EBITDA margin can make comparisons easier when companies have different capital structures. It can also highlight operating leverage: whether revenue growth is translating into better profitability.
Stable or rising EBITDA margins may suggest better cost control, pricing power, scale benefits, or a stronger revenue mix.
What EBITDA margin misses
EBITDA is not free cash flow. It excludes capital expenditures, working capital needs, interest, taxes, and some real economic costs. For asset-heavy businesses, depreciation and capital spending can be central to the business model.
Stock analysis should not stop at EBITDA margin. Compare it with operating margin, net margin, free cash flow margin, and debt measures.
How to compare EBITDA margin
Compare EBITDA margin within the same industry where possible. Software, industrials, retailers, banks, and utilities can have very different margin structures, so cross-sector comparisons can mislead.
EBITDA margin is a helpful operating profitability lens, but it must be checked against cash flow, capital intensity, and sector norms.