A home painter is willing to take any job that pays $400 per day or more — that's the minimum that covers their costs and the opportunity cost of their time. They land a job paying $600 per day. The $200 difference — revenue above the minimum acceptable price — is their producer surplus. Aggregated across all suppliers in a market, producer surplus is the welfare gain that sellers collectively extract from participating in the market at the prevailing price.
In plain terms
Producer surplus is the difference between the price a seller actually receives for a good and the minimum price they would have accepted to supply it. That minimum price is equal to the marginal cost of production — the true cost of supplying the unit.
Producer Surplus per unit = Price Received – Marginal Cost
Graphically, total producer surplus in a market is the area above the supply curve and below the market price, from zero to the equilibrium quantity. Because supply curves slope upward (higher-cost units are brought to market as price rises), lower-cost producers earn more surplus at any given market price — their production costs are well below the price they receive.
Combined with consumer surplus, producer surplus makes up total economic surplus — the total value created by market exchange:
Total Surplus = Consumer Surplus + Producer Surplus
Competitive equilibrium maximizes total surplus. Any departure from equilibrium — monopoly pricing, a tax, a price control — redistributes and reduces total surplus, creating deadweight loss.
Why it works this way
The supply curve represents the marginal cost of each successive unit produced. Sellers with low production costs (shown at the bottom-left of the supply curve) receive a large surplus at the market price; sellers with production costs just at the market price (the marginal seller) receive zero surplus. As market price rises, existing producers capture more surplus and new producers enter (their cost was just above the old price but now covered).
The Bureau of Economic Analysis corporate profit data measures the aggregate producer surplus across the economy in the form of business profits — the revenue above the cost of production that firms capture. Industries with high profit margins have high producer surplus; commoditized industries with thin margins have producer surplus approaching zero.
A real example
In agricultural commodity markets, producer surplus is directly observable. When drought reduces supply and drives corn prices up sharply, producers who still have corn to sell capture enormous surplus — their production costs are fixed at pre-drought levels, but the market price has soared. The USDA's farm income data tracks this dynamic: farm income spikes when commodity prices rise sharply, reflecting the surge in producer surplus captured by sellers at the higher price.
Why it matters
Producer surplus is the revenue side of welfare analysis. When a government considers a price ceiling (capping the maximum price sellers can charge), it explicitly reduces producer surplus to benefit consumers — a deliberate redistribution of total surplus. When it imposes an excise tax, both consumer and producer surplus fall, with the tax revenue being transferred to the government and the deadweight loss being destroyed entirely. Every policy affecting market prices has a distributional impact on the split between consumer and producer surplus — and an efficiency impact on total surplus.





