Finance & Money

Cost Per Wear Calculator

See the real cost of an item per use — so a cheap thing you never wear can lose to a pricey one you wear daily.

Calculator

USD
Quick picks
25 / yr
150150250365
4 yr
0.55101525
USD
USD
USD
USD
Cost per wear
$2.50/ wear
Over 100 wears, net cost $250.00
Total wears
100
Net cost
$250.00
Wears to hit $1.00/wear
250 wears

Great value per wear

$2.50 / wear

At $2.50 per wear this is solid value. Keep wearing it and the cost only drops. 250 wears to drop under $1.00 per wear.

Cost per wear is a planning estimate. Care costs, resale value, and how often you actually reach for an item are guesses — revisit them as your habits change.

Results are estimates. Verify with a professional for important decisions.

About this calculator

Cost per wear turns a sticker price into the number that actually matters: what each use costs you. Divide the real, all-in cost of an item by how many times you wear it, and an expensive coat you reach for all winter can be cheaper per use than a bargain top that stays on its hanger. Enter a price, how often you wear it, and how long you keep it to see whether something is a steal or a closet ornament.

How to read your results

The headline figure is your cost per wear in your chosen currency. The "total wears" stat multiplies your wears-per-year by the years you own the item; "net cost" is what you actually spent after care costs and any money you get back on resale. The verdict band — steal, great value, fair, or pricey — compares the per-wear cost against simple rule-of-thumb levels (under 1, under 3, under 8). The goal line tells you how many wears it takes to push the cost under 1 per wear.

Worked example

A 250 wool coat, worn about 25 times each winter, kept for 4 years.

25 × 4 = 100 wears, so 250 ÷ 100 = 2.50 per wear — "great value." Adding 40 of dry-cleaning over those years lifts it to 2.90, still solid. Wear it 250 times in total and it finally drops under 1.00 per wear.

Frequently asked questions

What is cost per wear?

Cost per wear is the price of an item divided by the number of times you use it. A 200 pair of boots worn 200 times costs 1 per wear; the same boots worn twice cost 100 per wear. It is the simplest way to judge whether something is genuinely good value or just cheap up front.

Should I include care and resale in the cost?

Yes, if you want the true picture. Dry-cleaning, resoling, and repairs add to what an item really costs you, while reselling it later gives some of that money back. This calculator lets you add ongoing care costs and subtract an expected resale value, so the per-wear figure reflects the whole ownership, not just the day you bought it.

How do I estimate wears per year?

Think in terms of how it fits your routine. A daily staple might be 150 to 250 wears a year; a work-only item, maybe 100; a seasonal coat, 20 to 40; an occasion piece, a handful. It is fine to estimate — the point is to compare honestly. If you are unsure, use a lower number, since most people overestimate how often they wear things.

Is a higher price always worse value?

No. Cost per wear often rewards quality. A well-made jacket you wear for years can beat a cheap one you replace every season, because the price is spread over far more wears. The trap is the opposite: a low price you barely use. Cheap-but-rarely loses to pricey-but-daily almost every time.

How it's calculated

The formula is costPerWear = netCost ÷ totalWears. Total wears is wearsPerYear × yearsOwned, rounded to a whole number. Net cost is price + care costs − resale value, floored at zero (you cannot spend less than nothing). Money is rounded to two decimals and the per-wear figure to two decimals. The verdict thresholds are currency-neutral rules of thumb measured in your own price's currency, not exchange-rate adjusted, so treat them as a guide rather than a precise comparison across currencies.

Spot a translation issue, a calculation issue, or have a suggestion? Let us know.

200 more like this. Pick the next one.