Profitability Index (PI)

Capital Budgeting
Updated Apr 2026 Has calculator

The ratio of the present value of future cash inflows to the initial investment cost.

What is Profitability Index?

The profitability index (PI), also called the benefit-cost ratio, measures how much value is created per dollar invested. PI equals the present value of all future cash flows divided by the absolute value of the initial investment. A PI above 1.0 means the project creates value (equivalent to a positive NPV); a PI below 1.0 destroys value. PI is particularly useful for capital rationing — when a company must choose among multiple positive-NPV projects with a limited budget, ranking by PI ensures the highest value per dollar is selected first.

Formula

PI = PV of Future Cash Flows ÷ |Initial Investment|

Worked Example

Worked example — Capital Project — CFA Curriculum Illustration

Same 5-year project at 10% hurdle rate

Step 1  Initial investment: −$500,000
Step 2  PV of future inflows at 10%: $558,300 (NPV of $58,300 + $500K initial)
Step 3  PI = $558,300 ÷ $500,000 = 1.117
Step 4  → The project creates $1.117 in value for every $1.00 invested

Source: CFA Institute — Corporate Finance, 4th ed., Capital Budgeting (2024-01-01)

Calculate Profitability Index

Enter comma-separated cash flows starting at t=0. CF₀ must be negative. E.g.: -500000, 120000, 150000, 180000, 160000, 130000

Cost of capital or hurdle rate

Profitability Index

Not investment advice.

How to Interpret Profitability Index

< 1
PI < 1 — destroys value; project should be rejected
1 – 1
PI = 1 — exactly meets hurdle rate; marginal
1.01 – 1.5
PI 1.0–1.5 — creates moderate value
> 1.5
PI > 1.5 — strong value creation per dollar invested

📚 Capital Budgeting — Complete the path

  1. NPV
  2. IRR
  3. MIRR
  4. Payback Period
  5. Discounted Payback
  6. Profitability Index