Guides · financial literacy
How to read a P&L — the owner's walkthrough.
Revenue, COGS, gross margin, operating expenses, net — what each layer actually tells you, in the order a forty-year accountant reads them. No jargon worship; this is the ten-minute monthly habit that runs businesses.
Written by the firm that builds these statements monthly — and reads them with owners. General education, not advice for your specific situation.
In brief
The P&L in four answers.
What is a P&L?
The report of what you earned, spent, and kept for a period — revenue at the top, costs subtracted in layers, net profit at the bottom. A story, read top to bottom.
What's the most important line?
For monthly reading: gross margin. It moves before net profit does, and it's the earliest drift signal you have — costs creeping or pricing slipping show up there first.
Why doesn't profit match my bank account?
The P&L measures earning, not cash: unpaid invoices count, inventory doesn't, loan principal never appears. Different report, different question — the cash mechanics →
What's the catch?
A P&L is only as true as the books beneath it. Unreconciled books produce statements that read beautifully and lie — accuracy first, reading habit second.
The walkthrough
Five layers, read in order.
1 · Revenue — everything you earned for the period, recognized when earned rather than when paid. Read it against your own recent months, not against hope. One honest question here: is the trend a season, a blip, or a direction?
2 · Cost of goods sold (COGS) — what it directly cost to deliver the thing you sold: materials, direct labor, the food on the plate, the subcontractor on the job. Not rent, not the office — just the cost that scales with each sale.
3 · Gross profit and gross margin — revenue minus COGS, and that number as a percentage of revenue. This is the line a working accountant reads first, because it answers the business's most fundamental question: does the thing you sell make money before the business around it? When margin thins a point at a time — supplier creep, quiet discounting, a price that hasn't moved in two years — it shows here months before the bottom line confesses.
4 · Operating expenses — the business around the thing: rent, payroll (non-COGS), insurance, software, marketing. The question this section answers: what did running the business cost? Gross profit minus operating expenses gives the second subtotal, operating income — the cleanest measure of operating health, because it shows what the core business produced before financing and tax considerations enter.
5 · Other items, then net profit — interest income and expense, gains or losses on asset sales, genuine one-offs: everything that sits outside operations. Subtract this final layer and you reach net income, the bottom line — what you report. Operating income is what tells you whether you're running the business well; net income is what's left after everything. By the time you reach it, you should already know why it is what it is — that's the whole point of reading top-down. A net number that surprises you is a sign the monthly habit hasn't formed yet, not a sign to panic.
Every P&L — any industry, any software, any accounting method — reduces to this same flow: revenue → gross profit → operating income → net income. Each section answers its own question (how much did we book? do the unit economics work? what did running it cost? did we make money?), and the story lives in the transitions between them.
A Westgate framework · the operating discipline
Variance Review.
Variance Review is the disciplined month-over-month and year-over-year comparison of P&L lines against prior periods to identify drift, errors, and performance change before they compound. The discipline lives in the comparison, not the absolute number: a $5,000 marketing line in isolation means nothing; a $5,000 marketing line that's 60% higher than last month and 40% higher than the same month last year means something specific. It's the foundation of operational financial literacy — and the habit that catches reconciliation errors, classification errors, and business problems before they require a cleanup engagement.
The practice, concretely: three columns, same week every month, 15–30 minutes. Current month, prior month, same month one year ago (in QuickBooks Online: Reports → Profit and Loss → Customize → Compare → Previous Period and Previous Year — save it as a memorized report so it's one click forever after). Scan revenue first: up year-over-year is real growth; up only month-over-month is usually seasonal noise; down both ways means the rest of the P&L is downstream of a sales problem, not a cost problem. Then gross margin percentage, then flag any operating line moving 20%+ in either direction — most variances have obvious causes (the annual insurance renewal, a software price change); the ones that don't are the work. Read the uncategorized line last, but always: non-zero means the file is drifting.
The shortlist
Seven lines that reveal almost everything.
Most P&Ls run sixty-plus lines. You don't read them equally — these seven, watched monthly with both comparisons, carry the signal.
1 · Revenue — total and by stream
Against prior month AND same month last year. Both comparisons matter; only one of them sees seasonality.
2 · Gross margin %
The canary: margin shrinkage almost always precedes net-income shrinkage — often weeks or months before the bottom line confesses.
3 · Payroll as % of revenue
Usually the largest operating line. Track the ratio, not the dollar, so growth doesn't disguise drift.
4 · Rent / occupancy %
Should sit inside a known band that moves only at lease renewal — anything else is usually misclassification.
5 · Marketing spend
Absolute and as % of revenue — and compare spend to the revenue change a couple of months out, not the same month.
6 · Uncategorized expense
At or near zero on a clean close. A rising figure is a forming Holding Account Spiral — the early signal of a file headed for cleanup.
7 · Net income %
The bottom line — meaningful only after the six above are understood. A healthy net on unreconciled books is a fiction.
Where readings go wrong
Five misreads behind most bad P&L decisions.
Reading the bottom line first
The bottom line is the answer; the story is above it. Top-down, always — revenue, margin, opex, then net.
Trusting an unreconciled P&L
If accounts aren't reconciled to statements, the numbers are estimates dressed as facts. A meaningful P&L sits on reconciled books — never the other way around.
Ignoring depreciation
Depreciation recognizes real asset consumption. Pretending it isn't real makes the P&L look better and decisions worse — especially equipment-replacement timing.
Confusing revenue with cash
Revenue is what you earned; cash is what landed. Cash questions belong to the cash-flow view, and forcing the P&L to answer them usually means accrual books read as cash.
Watching dollars instead of percentages
Dollar comparisons distort across periods of different size — bigger month, bigger everything. Percentages are the comparison currency.
The statement set
P&L vs balance sheet vs cash flow — which answers what.
The three statements answer three different questions, and half the skill of reading financials is reaching for the right one. The P&L answers "did we make money during the period?" — performance across a stretch of time, the home of Variance Review. The balance sheet answers "what does the business own and owe right now?" — a single point in time; it's what your CPA needs for filing and what a lender reads first. The cash-flow statement answers "where did the money actually come from and go?" — the report for the profitable-but-tight question the P&L structurally cannot answer.
Read them as a set: a clean monthly close on books at the CPA-Ready Threshold produces all three in coherent form, agreeing with each other line by line. Three reports that disagree are their own diagnostic — the close itself probably needs work first. Statement production lives with our financial statement preparation; the monthly senior read of the whole set is reporting advisory.
The 40-year read
The four things David checks first.
These are the same drift mechanisms our reporting advisory watches monthly — here's the self-serve version.
1 · Margin vs your own history
Not against an industry table — against your last six months. Drift is a direction, and only your own history shows it.
2 · The categories that grew
Each expense line against its own past. Six small creeps hide better than one big jump — the comparison column finds them.
3 · Owner-pay sustainability
Whether what the owner takes reflects what the business earns. The kindest early conversation a P&L can start.
4 · The line that surprised you
Surprise is information: either the business changed or the books are wrong. Both deserve ten minutes before the month moves on.
Want this read done with you, monthly, by the person whose standard the books are kept to? That's financial reporting advisory — the same mechanisms, applied as a service on top of a reconciled monthly close.
A P&L is only as readable as the books beneath it. The free assessment tells you, plainly, whether yours can be trusted.
Free books assessmentP&L FAQ
The questions owners ask about this statement.
Books too messy for the statement to be trusted? Start with a cleanup. More guides: the guides hub →
From reading to running
Get a P&L worth reading — built from reconciled books.
A senior operator reviews where your books stand, free, and scopes the monthly close that makes this guide's habit possible. Fixed fee in writing; the reading lesson comes with the relationship.