What Is the Average Profit Margin for a Medical Spa?

A well-run single-location practice should produce 27.6% EBITDA at $1.5 million in revenue. Most owners can't calculate their actual margin. Here is what the numbers look like and why most practices run below the benchmark.

A well-run single-location medical spa should produce 27.6% EBITDA at $1.5 million in annual revenue, according to AMSPA State of the Industry data. The average single-location practice in the United States generates $1,398,833 in annual revenue. That is the starting point. Most owners cannot tell you, within 10 percentage points, what their actual margin is on that revenue.

The gap between what a practice earns and what it actually keeps is almost never random.

It traces to four specific financial problems: injectable product costs never reconciled against service revenue, labor percentages that drift above benchmark without a weekly flag, device lease payments allocated to overhead instead of the service line they support, and package revenue recorded as income the day it is collected rather than when services are delivered. Fix those four things and most practices get much closer to benchmark.

What is med spa profit margin? Medical spa profit margin is operating income divided by total revenue, typically expressed as EBITDA margin (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization). The AMSPA benchmark for a well-run single-location practice at $1.5 million revenue is 27.6% EBITDA. Below 20% signals one of four fixable problems: unreconciled injectable COGS, labor drift above 42%, device lease allocated to overhead instead of the service line, or package revenue booked on collection instead of delivery. Fixing all four typically recovers 8 to 14 points of margin without changing pricing or adding patients.

What is EBITDA and why does it matter for a med spa?

EBITDA stands for Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization.

For a medical spa, it is the closest approximation to operating profit before the tax and financing decisions your accountant handles. It is the number acquirers use when valuing a practice, the number lenders look at when considering financing, and the number that tells you whether the practice is actually generating cash or just generating revenue.

The formula is straightforward:

EBITDA
= Revenue minus Cost of Goods Sold minus Operating Expenses (excluding interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization)

At $1.5 million in revenue with 27.6% EBITDA, the practice retains approximately $414,000 before interest and taxes. At 15% EBITDA, the same revenue retains $225,000. That $189,000 difference is the cost of not tracking your margins.

What is the average profit margin for a medical spa by service line?

The overall EBITDA number hides a more important picture: margin varies significantly by service line. Injectables and laser behave very differently, and the gap between them is where most owners are surprised.

Service Line Target Gross Margin Common Actual (Without COGS Reconciliation) Most Common Problem
Neurotoxins (Botox, Dysport, Xeomin) 60–70% 35–45% Allergan invoices never subtracted from revenue
Dermal Fillers (Galderma, Merz) 60–70% 38–48% Vendor invoices categorized as general supply expense
Laser / Energy Devices 40–55% 20–35% Lease payment allocated to overhead, not to the service line
Body Contouring 45–60% 25–40% Consumables and handpiece costs not tracked per session
Skincare / Retail 50–65% Varies widely Cost of goods often tracked correctly; margin is typically the best on the menu

The pattern is consistent: injectable margins appear high on the surface because vendor invoices flow through a separate accounts payable process and never get reconciled against service revenue in QuickBooks.

A practice doing $40,000 per month in Botox and filler may believe its gross margin is 80%. Once Allergan and Galderma invoices are subtracted from that revenue, the actual gross margin is closer to 40%.

60–70%
Target gross margin for injectables after vendor product costs
Industry benchmark. Most practices run 20–25 points below this because vendor COGS are never reconciled against service revenue.

The four things that pull a med spa below benchmark

1. Unreconciled injectable COGS

When you purchase Botox from Allergan, the invoice goes to accounts payable. When you deliver the Botox treatment, the revenue goes to your top line. In most QuickBooks setups, these two entries never meet. The result: gross margin on your injectable services reads 80% when the real number, after Allergan and Galderma product costs, is closer to 45%.

The fix is a monthly reconciliation that ties each injectable vendor invoice to the corresponding service line revenue. This is not complicated accounting. It is just accounting that almost no bookkeeper performs for med spa clients.

2. Labor percentage drift

Labor at 35–42% of revenue is the healthy range for a well-run practice. Above 42% is a warning signal. Above 50%, the practice is losing money on growth: every new dollar of revenue costs more than 50 cents in labor before any other expenses are paid.

Labor drift happens slowly. An injector hire in March, a coordinator added in June, a part-time esthetician in September.

By December, labor has moved from 40% to 52% of revenue and no one noticed because the monthly P&L shows revenue up and the owner assumes that means things are going well. Weekly labor tracking against revenue, updated Monday morning, catches the drift in the month it starts rather than the April after it started.

35–42%
Healthy labor as a percentage of revenue for a medical spa
Above 45% signals a scheduling or pricing problem. Above 50%, the practice loses money on growth.

3. Device lease allocated to overhead

A laser device leased at $4,500 per month needs to generate enough treatment revenue to cover that payment plus the consumables, plus the injector or esthetician time, plus the overhead allocation. Most practices log the lease as a fixed operating expense and never calculate how many treatments the device needs to produce per week to break even.

The break-even calculation is not difficult. If the device costs $4,500 per month and each treatment session generates $350 in net revenue after consumables, the device needs to run 12.9 sessions per month to cover its own cost. If the device is running 6 sessions per month, the practice is cash-flow negative on that service line by roughly $1,800 per month and nobody has calculated that number.

4. Package revenue recorded on collection, not delivery

When a patient purchases a 5-session package for $2,500, QuickBooks records $2,500 in revenue on the date of purchase under default settings. The problem: that $2,500 is a liability until the sessions are delivered. It is cash collected in advance for services not yet rendered.

Recording package revenue at collection inflates current-period revenue, understates the true liability on the balance sheet, and makes the practice appear more profitable than it is until the sessions are delivered and the real cost of delivery appears. The correct treatment is to record the $2,500 as deferred revenue and recognize it in equal portions as each session is delivered.

How to calculate your medical spa's actual profit margin

The calculation requires five numbers most owners do not have readily available:

  1. 1
    Total revenue. Gross service revenue plus retail, minus refunds and chargebacks. Pull from QuickBooks, not the POS. Confirm deferred revenue for packages has been moved out of income.
  2. 2
    Injectable COGS. Total Allergan, Galderma, Merz, Evolus, and Revance invoices for the period, coded to vendor-specific COGS accounts.
  3. 3
    Device and consumable costs. Lease payments plus per-session consumables (handpieces, tips, gels) allocated to the service line, not to overhead.
  4. 4
    Total labor. All W-2 and 1099 compensation, payroll taxes, benefits, and owner's market-rate salary if the owner performs clinical work.
  5. 5
    Operating overhead. Rent, utilities, software, marketing, administrative staff, insurance, and all non-clinical costs.

Subtract items 2 through 5 from item 1 to get operating profit. Divide by total revenue to get your operating margin. Add back depreciation and amortization from your balance sheet to get EBITDA.

If your injectable vendor invoices are not reconciled against service revenue in QuickBooks, that calculation is meaningless. The gross margin number will be 20–30 points higher than the real figure, and every downstream calculation, labor as a percent of revenue, net margin, EBITDA, will be wrong in the same direction.

Most med spa owners know their top-line revenue number. Very few know their actual net margin. The gap between those two figures is the job of a CFO, not a bookkeeper.

What to do if your margin is below benchmark

A practice running below 20% EBITDA has one or more of the four problems described above. The diagnostic process takes about a week of clean reconciliation work:

  1. 1
    Pull every injectable vendor invoice for the last 12 months and reconcile against service revenue by month. This alone usually closes 10–15 percentage points of the gap between apparent and actual margin.
  2. 2
    Calculate labor as a percentage of revenue for each of the last 12 months. If the number trended upward, identify the hire or rate change that caused it.
  3. 3
    Pull each device lease payment and calculate the break-even session volume. Compare against actual treatment counts from your booking system.
  4. 4
    Review the balance sheet for deferred revenue. If the deferred revenue line is zero or missing and the practice sells packages, the books are materially misstated.

Most practices that go through this process find they are running 8–14 percentage points below the 27.6% benchmark. The causes are almost always the same four items. The fix is not a new pricing strategy or a new marketing campaign. It is accurate books.

Worked example: closing a 10-point margin gap at $1.4M revenue

Annual revenue: $1,400,000

Current EBITDA (below benchmark): 17% = $238,000

Target EBITDA (AMSPA benchmark): 27.6% = $386,400

Margin gap: 10.6 points = $148,400/year

Where it usually hides:

Injectable COGS reconciliation: +4 to +6 points ($56K to $84K)

Labor percentage correction (48% to 42%): +6 points ($84K)

Device break-even enforcement: +1 to +2 points ($14K to $28K)

Deferred revenue cleanup: no EBITDA change, but cash flow stabilizes

Total recoverable at benchmark: roughly $140K to $180K/year. No new patients. No price change.

Common mistake: chasing revenue to fix a margin problem

When EBITDA is below benchmark, the instinct is to run an ad campaign or add a provider to drive more patients. If the underlying problem is unreconciled COGS or labor drift, additional revenue makes the dollar loss larger, not smaller. A 17% EBITDA practice that grows 20% without fixing COGS and labor is carrying a bigger margin problem a year later. The fix is sequenced: reconcile the books first, enforce the benchmarks weekly, then scale. Growth before discipline compounds the wrong numbers.

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Frequently asked questions

A well-run single-location medical spa should produce 27.6% EBITDA at $1.5 million in annual revenue, according to AMSPA industry data. Most practices run 8–14 points below this benchmark because injectable product costs, device lease payments, and labor percentages are not tracked against service revenue on a weekly basis.
27.6% is the benchmark for a well-run single-location practice at $1.5 million in revenue. Below 15% usually indicates untracked COGS, labor above 45% of revenue, or device lease payments that exceed the revenue the service line generates.
The AMSPA State of the Industry report puts average annual revenue for a single-location U.S. medical spa at $1,398,833. Revenue varies by market, service mix, number of injectors, and whether the practice offers laser and body contouring alongside injectables.
The four most common causes are injectable product costs never subtracted from revenue, labor percentage drifting above 42% without a weekly flag, device lease payments allocated to overhead instead of the service line they support, and package revenue recorded as income when collected rather than when services are delivered. Fix those four items and most practices get close to the 27.6% benchmark.
Injectables should carry 60–70% gross margin after vendor product costs. Most owners assume 80% because they have never subtracted Allergan and Galderma invoices from service revenue. The actual number is typically 20–25 points lower than what appears in QuickBooks by default.