What is net sales?
Net sales is gross revenue minus returns, allowances and discounts — the top-line figure recognised on the income statement under IFRS 15 / ASC 606. It represents the consideration the seller actually expects to keep from goods or services delivered to customers.
Formula
Net Sales = Gross Sales − Returns − Allowances − Discounts
Returns: goods sent back by customers. Allowances: price reductions granted after delivery, typically for damaged or non-conforming items. Discounts: volume, early-payment or promotional price cuts. Sales tax and VAT are excluded from net sales because they are collected on behalf of the tax authority, not earned.
Net sales vs. related metrics
- Net sales vs. gross sales: gross sales is the headline number before any deductions; net sales is what the auditor signs off on.
- Net sales vs. recurring revenue: net sales aggregates one-time and recurring; recurring revenue isolates the subscription stream.
- Net sales vs. bookings: bookings is the contract value signed in the period; net sales is the revenue recognised in the period.
Why it matters for founders and investors
Net sales is the denominator for nearly every margin metric — gross margin, operating margin, net margin. A widening gap between gross and net sales is a signal: high return rates flag product quality or fit problems; aggressive discounting flags pricing power erosion. In due diligence, expect investors to ask for a build-up from gross sales down to net sales, with each deduction explained.
Do: reconcile net sales to gross sales monthly; track return-rate and discount-rate as separate KPIs.
Don’t: report gross sales as “revenue” — it overstates the top line and falls apart under audit.