ROA Calculator
Calculate Return on Assets (ROA) from net income and total assets. Evaluate company profitability and compare asset efficiency across periods.
Formula
ROA = (Net Income / Total Assets) x 100
Where Net Income is the total profit after all expenses and taxes, and Total Assets is the sum of all company-owned resources. The DuPont decomposition further breaks this into ROA = Profit Margin x Asset Turnover = (Net Income / Revenue) x (Revenue / Total Assets).
Worked Examples
Example 1: Technology Company ROA Analysis
Problem: A tech company has net income of $2 million, total assets of $10 million, and revenue of $15 million. Calculate ROA and DuPont components.
Solution: ROA = Net Income / Total Assets = $2,000,000 / $10,000,000 = 20%\n\nDuPont Decomposition:\nProfit Margin = $2,000,000 / $15,000,000 = 13.33%\nAsset Turnover = $15,000,000 / $10,000,000 = 1.5x\nROA = 13.33% x 1.5 = 20% (confirmed)\n\nInterpretation: Strong ROA driven by both good margins and efficient asset use.
Result: ROA: 20% | Profit Margin: 13.33% | Asset Turnover: 1.5x
Example 2: Bank vs Retailer Comparison
Problem: Bank: $500M net income, $50B assets. Retailer: $500M net income, $5B assets. Compare their ROA.
Solution: Bank ROA = $500M / $50,000M = 1.0%\nRetailer ROA = $500M / $5,000M = 10.0%\n\nDespite identical net income, the retailer has 10x higher ROA because banks must hold massive asset bases (loans, securities) as part of their business model. The bank ROA of 1.0% is actually solid for the banking industry where 1-2% is typical.
Result: Bank ROA: 1.0% (good for banks) | Retailer ROA: 10.0% (good for retail)
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Return on Assets (ROA) and why is it important?
Return on Assets (ROA) is a financial ratio that measures how efficiently a company uses its assets to generate profit. It is calculated by dividing net income by total assets and expressed as a percentage. A higher ROA indicates better asset utilization and management efficiency. Investors use ROA to compare companies within the same industry, as asset intensity varies significantly across sectors. For example, a technology company with few physical assets might have an ROA of 15%, while a capital-intensive utility company might have an ROA of 3%, and both could be performing well for their respective industries.
How is ROA calculated and what does the formula mean?
ROA is calculated using the formula: ROA = Net Income / Total Assets x 100. Net income is the bottom-line profit after all expenses, taxes, and interest payments. Total assets include everything the company owns: cash, inventory, equipment, property, intellectual property, and receivables. Some analysts use average total assets (beginning plus ending assets divided by two) for greater accuracy when assets change significantly during the period. The resulting percentage tells you how many cents of profit each dollar of assets generates. For instance, a 10% ROA means every dollar of assets produces 10 cents of annual profit.
What is the DuPont decomposition of ROA?
The DuPont analysis breaks ROA into two component ratios: Profit Margin and Asset Turnover. The formula is ROA = (Net Income / Revenue) x (Revenue / Total Assets), which simplifies to Net Income / Total Assets. This decomposition reveals whether a company achieves its ROA through high profit margins (premium pricing or cost efficiency) or high asset turnover (generating more revenue per dollar of assets). A luxury goods company might have a 20% margin with 0.5x turnover, while a discount retailer might have a 3% margin with 3x turnover, and both could achieve similar ROA levels through different strategies.
What is a good ROA and how does it vary by industry?
A good ROA depends heavily on the industry because different sectors require vastly different asset levels. Technology and software companies often achieve ROA of 10-20% because they are asset-light businesses. Healthcare and pharmaceutical companies typically range from 5-12%. Banks and financial institutions usually have ROA of 1-2% because they hold enormous asset bases relative to income. Retail companies generally fall between 4-8%. Manufacturing ranges from 3-7%. Utilities typically show 2-4% ROA. The key is to compare a company against its direct industry peers rather than applying a universal benchmark across all sectors.
How does ROA differ from ROE (Return on Equity)?
ROA measures profitability relative to total assets (both debt-funded and equity-funded), while ROE measures profitability relative to shareholders equity only. The key difference is leverage: a company can boost ROE by taking on more debt without improving ROA. The relationship is expressed as ROE = ROA x Equity Multiplier (Total Assets / Equity). A company with 5% ROA and 2x leverage has 10% ROE. This means ROE can be artificially inflated by excessive borrowing, making ROA a more conservative and sometimes more reliable measure of operational efficiency. Analyzing both ratios together reveals how much a company relies on leverage versus genuine operational performance.
How can a company improve its ROA?
Companies can improve ROA by either increasing net income (the numerator) or reducing total assets (the denominator), or both. Income improvement strategies include raising prices, cutting costs, improving operational efficiency, and expanding into higher-margin products or services. Asset reduction strategies include selling underperforming assets, reducing excess inventory, improving receivables collection, outsourcing capital-intensive operations, and leasing rather than buying equipment. Some companies use sale-leaseback transactions to reduce assets on the balance sheet. The DuPont analysis helps identify which lever to pull: if profit margin is low, focus on pricing and costs; if asset turnover is low, focus on generating more revenue from existing assets.