Inventory Accounting
What it is
Inventory accounting is the area of accounting that assigns value to a company’s stock of goods and records changes in those values. Inventory typically exists in three stages:
* Raw materials
* Work in progress (WIP)
* Finished goods ready for sale
Accurate inventory accounting treats these items as assets and ensures the balance sheet and income statement reflect their correct values.
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Why inventory values change
Inventory values can fluctuate for many reasons, including:
* Depreciation, deterioration, or obsolescence
* Changing customer tastes or demand
* Supply constraints or surpluses
* Additional costs incurred in later production stages (e.g., clinical trials, transport)
Accounting must capture these changes so assets and cost of goods sold (COGS) are correctly reported.
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How it works
Accounting standards (e.g., GAAP and IFRS) require consistent methods to value inventory to prevent profit or asset inflation or understatement. Because profit = revenue − costs, misstating inventory affects COGS and therefore reported profit:
- Understating inventory cost can overstate profit.
- Overstating inventory value can overstate assets and company valuation.
Companies must select and consistently apply an inventory valuation method and adjust inventory for write-downs when value declines.
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Common valuation methods
- First-In, First-Out (FIFO): Assumes the earliest purchased or produced items are sold first. Ending inventory consists of the most recently acquired items.
- Last-In, First-Out (LIFO): Assumes the latest acquired items are sold first. (LIFO is permitted under GAAP in some jurisdictions but not under IFRS.)
- Average Cost (Weighted Average): Assigns an average cost to inventory based on total cost of goods available for sale divided by units available.
Each method affects COGS, ending inventory valuation, and tax/financial reporting differently; selection depends on business circumstances and applicable accounting standards.
Advantages of inventory accounting
- Provides a clearer picture of a company’s financial health by valuing assets appropriately.
- Helps management identify stages in the production cycle where costs can be reduced to improve margins.
- Supports better pricing, purchasing, and production decisions by tracking cost changes across stages.
Key takeaways
- Inventory accounting values goods at raw, in-progress, and finished stages and records changes that affect assets and profit.
- Changes in inventory value arise from wear, obsolescence, demand shifts, and additional production costs.
- Consistent valuation methods (FIFO, LIFO, average cost) and compliance with accounting standards ensure reliable financial reporting and help management optimize margins.