When you are calculating the cost of your products, how do you handle the freight? Is it included inyour cost of goods sold calculation? Or do you pay it from an expense account designated for freight orshipping?Luckily, the IRS rules are pretty clear in this area.
If you are shipping a product from your manufacturerto yourself, your prep center, or Amazon, this is considered “freight in” and can be included in yourcalculation for Inventory and COGS.
“Freight in” is defined in the IRS Tax Guide for Small Business as “Freight-in, express-in, and cartage-in on raw materials, supplies you use in production, and merchandise you purchase for sale are all part of the cost of goods sold.”
Click HERE to get FREE Freight and Shipping Ebook Guide
Whenever you pay for shipping out to your customer, this is not included in COGS but is a monthly expense. This expense of shipping to the customer is directly related to the sale of the product, so we include it in the Cost of Sales section and include it in the gross profit calculation.
While inbound shipping costs are considered COGS (Cost of Goods Sold), shipping to the consumer or outbound order shipping cost is not. Shipping costs must be carefully monitored in an effort to maximize ROI. Many factors play into the Cost of Goods Sold (COGS).
Freight-in is part of the production process and will be capitalized into inventory and expensed through cost of goods sold when the product is sold. Freight-in is the cost incurred to ship finished goods to a distributor or retailer. Freight-out is considered a selling expense and is expensed when incurred.
To calculate COGS accurately, it's important to consider all of the direct costs associated with producing or acquiring each unit sold. This includes everything from raw materials and packaging to freight charges and import duties. It does not include indirect expenses like office rent or advertising costs.
Transportation-in costs should be allocated or assigned to the products purchased. Therefore, the unsold products in inventory should include a portion of the transportation-in costs. The products that have been sold, should have their share of the transportation-in costs in the cost of goods sold).
If you track your expenses by department, then shipping would likely fall under your "operating expenses". This would include all the costs associated with running your business, like rent, utilities, payroll, and shipping.
shipping charges from a vendor for inventory do not need to be capitalized if you're considered a small business taxpayer (less than $25M in annual revenue). Therefore, they can be expensed to COGS immediately. Freight charges for equipment that the business uses should be capitalized into the cost of the asset.
Freight in: A freight in expense is the shipping cost associated with receiving goods from a manufacturer or supplier. Freight in is a common expense for stores, showrooms or manufacturers, as they source their materials from other places and add in this cost to the cost of receiving goods.
Freight in describes the cost incurred by a business for shipping raw materials or goods into their storage facility or production. It is a direct expense incurred as part of the business' daily operation and recorded as a debit in the inventory records.
Freight-in is capitalized onto the balance sheet since it's considered a production cost. Therefore, when freight-in is incurred, the company would debit inventory (freight-in) and credit cash (cash outflow to pay the expense).
The shipping expenses are held in inventory until sold, which means these costs are reported on the balance sheet in Merchandise Inventory. When the merchandise is sold, the shipping charges are transferred with all other inventory costs to Cost of Goods Sold on the income statement.
Freight-in is the money that the business spends to bring in goods for production purposes. It is reported as a direct expense in the books. By contrast, freight-out is the money spent by the business to ship and deliver finished products to customers.
When recording purchases with purchase invoices, freight-in can be added to inventory cost by adding a line item and selecting Freight-in in the Item field. (This line item replaces the blank-quantity line item for the inventory item used in the manual allocation method.)
For example, a shoemaker's COGS should only include the materials that go into the production of shoes and labor costs to make the shoes. The materials used for shipping and the labor used to sell the shoes should not be included in COGS figures.
Introduction: My name is Tyson Zemlak, I am a excited, light, sparkling, super, open, fair, magnificent person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.
We notice you're using an ad blocker
Without advertising income, we can't keep making this site awesome for you.