EBIT vs. EBITDA: Which Tells the Better Story?

EBIT vs. EBITDA: Which Tells the Better Story?

eliza hl

co-founder, asi

Published Date

EBIT vs. EBITDA: What’s the Difference and Why It Matters

EBIT and EBITDA are both ways to measure business performance — specifically, operating performance. They both sit above the net profit line, and they each filter out different things to give their picture of how a company is doing. But they’re not interchangeable. Here’s what to know.

Depreciation & Amortization can be located in semi-direct costs (EBIT structured) or it can be listed below the Operating Income line (EBITDA structure).

EBIT: Earnings Before Interest and Taxes

EBIT is a measure of a company’s core operating profit. It shows how much money the business makes from operations, before the cost of financing (interest) and before the government takes its cut (taxes).

EBIT = Revenue – Operating Expenses (including Depreciation &Amortization)
or:
EBIT = Net Income + Interest + Taxes

Use EBIT when you want to:

  • Compare companies with different tax rates or debt structures
  • Focus on operational performance without being distracted by financing decisions

EBIT shows operating profit after accounting for asset wear-and-tear. If you're comparing companies in different industries or geographies, it's a useful way to level the playing field—at least partially.

EBITDA: Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization

EBITDA goes one step further. It adds back non-cash expenses: depreciation (for physical assets) and amortization (for intangible assets). These are accounting estimates, not actual cash out the door.

EBIT = Revenue – COGS - SG&A - R&D Expenses (i.e. Operating Expenses but not including Depreciation &Amortization)
or:
EBITDA = EBIT + Depreciation + Amortization

Use EBITDA when you want to:

  • Focus on cash-generating ability, especially in asset-heavy industries
  • Strip out accounting choices that can distort comparisons
  • Estimate how much cash might be available to pay down debt or reinvest

That means EBITDA can be useful when you’re trying to understand how much cash the business is actually generating from operations.

A Simple Example

Let’s say a company reports the following for the year:

  • Revenue: $1,000,000
  • Operating Expenses (excluding depreciation): $600,000
  • Depreciation & Amortization: $50,000
  • Interest Expense: $30,000
  • Taxes: $70,000

We can calculate:EBIT = Revenue – Operating Expenses – D&A
= 1,000,000 – 600,000 – 50,000 = $350,000

EBITDA = EBIT + Depreciation + Amortization
= 350,000 + 50,000 = $400,000

This helps show the difference: EBIT shows operating profit after accounting for asset wear-and-tear; EBITDA adds that back in.

Industry Differences — and Accounting Placement

The usefulness of EBIT vs. EBITDA depends not just on the business model, but also on how the financials are structured.

In capital-heavy industries (airlines, telecoms, manufacturing), EBITDA is often used because depreciation significantly reduces reported profits, even when cash flow is strong. In these companies, depreciation is typically included in operating costs like COGS, so EBIT already reflects those expenses. EBITDA helps strip them out to focus on cash flow.

In tech and service firms (consulting, software), EBIT may be more relevant since there are fewer physical assets. But in many of these businesses, depreciation is recorded below the operating line—meaning EBIT doesn’t include it. In these cases, EBITDA gives a more apples-to-apples comparison and provides a more complete picture of performance.

Watch Out for EBITDA Trickery

EBITDA can be helpful, but also misleading if used carelessly.

Adding back depreciation and amortization ignores the reality that equipment wears out and software licenses expire. If a business needs to reinvest heavily just to keep operating, EBITDA might overstate its financial health.

In some cases, companies highlight EBITDA to distract from poor net income. That’s not automatically a red flag — but it’s worth looking twice.

Are EBIT and EBITDA GAAP-Compliant?

EBIT and EBITDA are non-GAAP metrics. That means they’re not required by accounting standards—and companies aren’t required to report them. But many do, especially in earnings calls and investor presentations, because they help clarify a company’s operating or cash-generating performance.

If a company reports EBIT or EBITDA, it must:

  • Clearly label them as non-GAAP
  • Reconcile them to official GAAP metrics like Net Income
  • Explain how they were calculated

Used properly, these measures can provide valuable insight. But they aren’t substitutes for audited financials—and they’re only as reliable as the assumptions behind them.

So Which One Should You Use?

It depends on the question you’re asking.

If you’re asking... Use...
How profitable is this company operationally? EBIT
How much cash is available for debt or reinvestment? EBITDA
How does this company compare to others in the industry? Either — but be consistent and know what’s included

Bottom Line

EBIT and EBITDA both filter out things that distort financial performance. But they’re filters — not final answers. The value lies in asking the right question, knowing what each metric includes, and not mistaking either one for cold hard cash.

Want to test your understanding?
Try our EBITDA Storytelling Challenge to compare two companies with identical EBITDA—but very different realities.

Or explore the full simulation that inspired this blog.
Learn more about Income|Outcome workshops →