WACC Calculator
Blended capital cost.
Calculate weighted average cost of capital (WACC) from equity, debt, their costs, and tax rate. Enter cost of equity to see wacc from equity and debt.
What this tool does
Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC) blends the cost of equity and after-tax cost of debt by their respective weights in the capital structure. This calculator takes your total equity value, total debt value, cost of equity percentage, pre-tax cost of debt percentage, and tax rate, then returns a single WACC figure representing the blended rate. The result illustrates what an organisation pays on average across all its financing sources. The most significant drivers are the relative sizes of debt and equity, and the cost of each component. A typical scenario involves comparing financing structures or benchmarking against industry standards. The calculator assumes both debt and equity values are market-based, applies a simplified tax shield model to debt, and does not account for flotation costs or changes in capital structure over time. This output is for educational illustration only.
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Formula Used
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Disclaimer
Results are estimates for educational purposes only. They do not constitute financial advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions.
What WACC actually measures
Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC) is the minimum return a business must earn to satisfy both its debt holders and its equity holders. It's the discount rate used in company valuation, capital budgeting, and investment appraisal. WACC isn't an abstract finance concept — it's what business decisions ultimately get judged against. A project returning 8% is good if the WACC is 6%; bad if the WACC is 10%. This calculator computes WACC; the commentary below is about how to use it and why it matters beyond finance textbooks.
The formula and its components
WACC = (E/V × Re) + (D/V × Rd × (1-Tc))
Where:
E = market value of equity
D = market value of debt
V = E + D (total firm value)
Re = cost of equity
Rd = cost of debt
Tc = corporate tax rate
The formula weights the cost of each capital source by its proportion of total capital. A company financed 70% equity and 30% debt, with equity cost 10% and debt cost 5% (after-tax at 25% corporate tax = 3.75%), has WACC = (0.7 × 10%) + (0.3 × 3.75%) = 7% + 1.125% = 8.125%.
The corporate tax effect
Corporation tax is 25% for profits above 250,000, with smaller profits rates scaling down. Interest on debt is tax-deductible; equity returns aren't. This means debt is structurally cheaper than equity on an after-tax basis: 1 of debt interest at 5% costs 0.0375 after tax relief; 1 of equity return at 10% costs 0.10. The tax shield on debt is one reason companies with stable cash flows use more leverage — it reduces WACC.
Cost of equity: the hardest component
Cost of debt is usually clear (interest rate on the company's borrowings). Cost of equity is conceptually harder because equity holders don't have a specified required return. The standard method uses Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM):
Re = Rf + β × (Rm - Rf)
Where:
Rf = low-risk rate 10-year gilt yield, currently ~4.5%)
β = beta (sensitivity to market movements)
Rm = expected market return (historically ~7-8% real for equity)
Rm - Rf = equity risk premium
For a typical company with beta 1.0: Re = 4.5% + 1.0 × (8% - 4.5%) = 8%. Higher-beta companies have higher costs of equity; stable, low-beta companies have lower costs. Tech startups might have beta of 1.5-2.0 (15-16% cost of equity); utilities might have beta 0.5-0.7 (6-7% cost of equity).
WACC in investment decisions
WACC is the primary discount rate for:
Discounted cash flow valuation: Projecting future cash flows and discounting at WACC to find present value. Higher WACC means lower valuation for the same cash flows.
Capital budgeting: Evaluating whether a proposed investment produces returns exceeding WACC. NPV positive at WACC means the investment creates value; NPV negative means it destroys value.
Comparable analysis: Understanding why similar companies trade at different multiples — different WACCs reflect different capital structures and risk profiles.
Pricing decisions: Understanding minimum margins needed to cover capital costs.
Companies that consistently earn above WACC create shareholder value; those earning below destroy it. This simple framework underlies most corporate finance decision-making.
The "optimal capital structure" question
Classical finance theory (Modigliani-Miller) originally argued capital structure doesn't matter — firm value is independent of debt/equity mix. Later refinements added frictions: tax shield on debt interest creates optimal leverage somewhere above zero; financial distress costs of excessive leverage create ceiling; agency costs from both pure-equity and pure-debt create preferences.
Practical implication: most mature companies have target capital structures around 30-60% debt, because the tax shield on debt makes moderate leverage optimal but excessive leverage introduces too much financial distress risk. Newly-founded companies often start all-equity (debt not available). Mature cash-generative companies often use substantial debt (tax-efficient). Very cyclical companies prefer less debt (distress risk during downturns).
WACC for private vs public companies
For public companies, both equity and debt values are observable: market cap for equity, bond prices or book value for debt. WACC calculation is straightforward.
For private companies, complications arise:
Equity value isn't observable (no market price). Estimation requires valuation approaches (comparable companies, transaction multiples, DCF).
Beta can't be directly measured. Usually estimated from comparable public companies adjusted for size and capital structure.
Illiquidity premium may apply — private equity investors typically require 3-5% higher returns than equivalent public companies.
Private company WACC estimates therefore have wider error bars than public company WACC. Different analysts looking at the same private company often produce WACC estimates varying by 2-4 percentage points.
The small vs large company difference
Smaller companies typically have higher costs of capital than larger ones:
Smaller equity issuance costs are higher as percentage of raise.
Bank lending rates are higher for small companies (more default risk).
Illiquidity premium is larger for small company equity.
Beta estimates tend higher for small companies.
A FTSE 100 company might have WACC of 7-8%; a FTSE 250 company 9-10%; a small company 11-15%. The range reflects not just risk but also cost of capital access — larger companies have cheaper access to both equity and debt markets.
WACC in personal finance decisions
Most personal finance doesn't use WACC explicitly, but the concept applies to:
Business ownership decisions: If you're considering buying a small business, estimating its WACC and comparing to expected returns is the key analysis. 12% WACC business returning 15% is value-creating; 15% WACC business returning 12% destroys value.
Investment property decisions: Your effective WACC on a leveraged property investment blends mortgage interest rate (cost of debt) with your required equity return. If property returns exceed this blended rate, value is created.
Personal debt consolidation: Consolidating high-interest debt into lower-interest debt reduces your personal "debt cost" and effectively lowers your WACC on the remaining financial exposure.
Understanding WACC intuitively helps evaluate "is this investment worth it?" questions across personal and business contexts.
The assumptions that matter most
Sensitivity analysis reveals which WACC inputs matter most:
low-risk rate: changes gilt yields quickly propagate through WACC. 1% change in low-risk rate typically moves WACC by 0.5-0.8%.
Equity risk premium: historically 3.5-4.5% for markets. 1% change moves WACC by 0.3-0.7% depending on equity weight.
Beta: 0.2 change in beta can move WACC by 0.6-1.2%.
Capital structure weights: shifts from 30% debt to 50% debt can change WACC by 0.5-1.5%.
Cost of debt: directly affects WACC but weighted by debt share; impact smaller than equity cost changes.
For any specific company, understanding which inputs have highest sensitivity helps focus estimation effort and understand uncertainty ranges.
What this calculator shows
The tool computes WACC based on capital structure weights, costs of debt and equity, and tax rate. It doesn't automatically estimate any of these inputs — it helps to provide them. For practical WACC estimation, use recent gilt yields (low-risk rate), industry beta estimates (from Damodaran's database or similar), current market equity/debt ratios, and actual cost of debt. The calculator does the arithmetic; the inputs determine the quality of the output.
££6,000,000 equity × 12% + ££4,000,000 debt × 7% × (1-21%) = 9.41%.
Inputs
This example uses typical values for illustration. Adjust the inputs above to match a specific situation and see how the result changes.
Sources & Methodology
Methodology
This calculator computes the weighted average cost of capital (WACC) by blending the costs of equity and debt financing. It first calculates the proportion of total firm value represented by equity (E/V) and debt (D/V), where V is the sum of equity and debt. The equity component is weighted by the cost of equity expressed as a percentage. The debt component is weighted by the after-tax cost of debt, computed by applying the tax shield adjustment (1 minus the tax rate) to the pre-tax cost of debt. This reflects the deductibility of interest expenses. The calculator assumes a stable capital structure and constant costs throughout the period. It does not account for flotation costs, changes in leverage over time, market volatility, or variations in tax treatment across different debt instruments.
References
Frequently Asked Questions
Book value or market value?
Why after-tax cost of debt?
How to estimate cost of equity?
Why does WACC matter for valuation?
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