Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) ExplainedFormula, Inventory Methods, and What It Reveals About a Business
COGS is the direct cost of producing everything a business sells — and the single biggest number standing between revenue and profit.
Table of Contents
Every business that makes or resells a product has a number that sits directly below revenue on the income statement. Before operating expenses, before interest, before taxes — there is COGS. It is the first cost line a business must cover just to break even, and it is frequently the largest.
COGS tells you how much it actually costs to produce and deliver the goods a business sold during a period. Get it wrong — in the accounting, in the analysis, or in the management — and every profitability metric downstream is distorted. Get it right, and you have one of the clearest windows into whether a business is becoming more or less efficient at its core activity.
This article explains what COGS includes, how the formula works, why the inventory method you choose changes the number, and what a rising or falling COGS tells you about a business's health.
What Is COGS?
COGS is a measure of production cost — not all costs. It captures only the expenses directly tied to making or acquiring the products sold. Rent for the company's head office, the CEO's salary, advertising spend — none of these appear in COGS, because none of them are direct inputs into production.
Think of it this way: if your business makes custom furniture, your COGS covers the wood, the screws, the varnish, and the wages of the craftspeople who build each piece. It does not cover the electricity in your showroom, your website hosting, or the cost of the accountant who processes payroll. Those are operating expenses.
This distinction matters enormously in financial analysis. COGS is subtracted from revenue to give gross profit — which tells you how efficiently a business produces its output before layering on overhead. Operating expenses come after, producing operating profit. The two layers measure different things.
What COGS Includes (and Excludes)
The boundary between what belongs in COGS and what belongs in operating expenses is one of the most common sources of confusion in accounting. Here is a clear breakdown.
What Is Included
COGS covers every cost that is directly and exclusively attributable to producing the goods sold:
| Cost Type | Example | In COGS? |
|---|---|---|
| Raw materials | Steel for a manufacturer, flour for a bakery, fabric for a clothing brand | ✓ Yes |
| Direct labour | Wages for factory workers, assembly line staff, kitchen staff at a restaurant | ✓ Yes |
| Manufacturing overhead | Factory rent, production equipment depreciation, utilities directly tied to production | ✓ Yes |
| Freight inbound | Shipping cost to receive raw materials at the factory | ✓ Yes |
| Purchase cost (retail/wholesale) | Wholesale price paid for goods resold without modification | ✓ Yes |
| Selling & admin salaries | Sales team wages, CEO pay, HR staff | ✗ No — OpEx |
| Marketing & advertising | Digital ads, print campaigns, trade show costs | ✗ No — OpEx |
| Office overhead | Head office rent, insurance, legal fees | ✗ No — OpEx |
| Interest expense | Loan interest, bond coupon payments | ✗ No — below operating profit |
Pure service businesses — consulting firms, law firms, software-as-a-service companies — often report "Cost of Revenue" or "Cost of Services" rather than COGS, but the concept is the same: direct costs tied to delivering the service. For a SaaS company, this typically includes hosting infrastructure, third-party API costs, and customer support salaries for implementation teams.
The COGS Formula
COGS is calculated using beginning and ending inventory balances, plus any purchases or production costs added during the period. The logic is straightforward: you start with what you had, add what you made or bought, then subtract what you still have left.
Beginning Inventory is from last period's balance sheet. Ending Inventory is counted at period-end. Purchases includes all direct costs added to inventory during the period.
The intuition: goods available for sale equals beginning inventory plus everything added during the period. Of that pool, some is still sitting in the warehouse at period-end (ending inventory). What was sold is the remainder — and that remainder's cost is COGS.
Notice that COGS is a derived figure — it is what remains after removing the cost of unsold inventory. This means inventory valuation directly determines COGS. And that brings us to the most technically important aspect of COGS: how you assign costs to units sold when prices change over time.
Three Inventory Costing Methods
When a business buys the same product at different prices across multiple orders, it needs a rule for deciding which cost attaches to each unit sold. Three methods dominate: FIFO, LIFO, and Weighted Average Cost. Each produces a different COGS — and therefore a different gross profit — from identical transactions.
The oldest inventory cost is assigned to goods sold first. Ending inventory reflects the most recent (typically higher) prices. Common globally.
The most recent inventory cost is assigned to goods sold first. Permitted under US GAAP; prohibited under IFRS. Lowers taxable income in inflationary environments.
A single blended cost per unit is calculated by dividing total inventory cost by total units. Applied uniformly to every unit sold and every unit remaining.
Why the Choice of Method Matters
The method is not just an accounting technicality. In a period of rising prices — which describes most industries in most years — FIFO produces lower COGS and higher reported profit than LIFO, because older (cheaper) costs flow through to sales first. LIFO does the reverse: higher COGS, lower reported profit, but a tax advantage. Weighted average lands between the two.
This means you cannot meaningfully compare COGS or gross margin across two companies if they use different inventory methods. Always check the accounting policy note in the financial statements before drawing conclusions.
"Two companies with identical purchasing costs and identical sales volumes can report materially different profits — simply because one uses FIFO and the other uses LIFO. The accountant's choice of method is not neutral."
Worked Example: FIFO vs LIFO vs Weighted Average
Let's make this concrete. Imagine a business — Northgate Electronics — that sells memory modules. During Q3, it makes three separate purchases and sells 700 units.
Purchase history, Q3:
| Date | Units Purchased | Cost per Unit | Total Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| July 1 (opening) | 200 units | $18.00 | $3,600 |
| August 14 | 400 units | $21.50 | $8,600 |
| September 22 | 300 units | $24.00 | $7,200 |
Total available: 900 units at a total cost of $19,400. Units sold during Q3: 700. Units remaining: 200.
Method 1 — FIFO
Under FIFO, the first 200 units sold carry the July opening cost ($18.00). The next 400 units sold carry the August cost ($21.50). The final 100 sold carry the September cost ($24.00).
| Units Sold (Cost Assignment) | |
| 200 units × $18.00 (July batch) | $3,600 |
| 400 units × $21.50 (August batch) | $8,600 |
| 100 units × $24.00 (Sep batch — partial) | $2,400 |
| COGS (FIFO) | $14,600 ✓ |
| Ending Inventory | |
| 200 units × $24.00 (remaining Sep batch) | $4,800 |
| Check: COGS + Ending Inventory | $19,400 |
Under FIFO, ending inventory reflects the most recent purchase price ($24.00). COGS is lower because older, cheaper costs are matched against sales first. This produces the highest gross profit in an inflationary environment.
Method 2 — LIFO
Under LIFO, the most recent 300 units (September, $24.00) are sold first, then 400 from August ($21.50). The oldest July batch stays in inventory.
| Units Sold (Cost Assignment) | |
| 300 units × $24.00 (Sep batch — most recent) | $7,200 |
| 400 units × $21.50 (Aug batch) | $8,600 |
| COGS (LIFO) | $15,800 ✓ |
| Ending Inventory | |
| 200 units × $18.00 (July batch — oldest) | $3,600 |
| Check: COGS + Ending Inventory | $19,400 |
LIFO produces COGS of $15,800 — $1,200 more than FIFO. This higher COGS reduces taxable income, which is why US companies in inflationary sectors often prefer LIFO. The trade-off: ending inventory looks artificially cheap at the old July cost.
Method 3 — Weighted Average Cost
Calculate a single blended cost per unit, then apply it uniformly to both sold and unsold units.
| Blended Cost Calculation | |
| Total cost of all inventory | $19,400 |
| Total units available | 900 units |
| Weighted average cost per unit | $21.56 |
| Applied to Sales and Ending Inventory | |
| 700 units sold × $21.56 | $15,089 |
| 200 units remaining × $21.56 | $4,311 |
| COGS (Weighted Avg) | $15,089 ✓ |
Weighted average smooths price fluctuations across the period. COGS of $15,089 falls between FIFO ($14,600) and LIFO ($15,800). This method is common in industries where distinguishing individual inventory batches is impractical — grain trading, oil refining, chemicals.
When comparing a LIFO company with a FIFO company, analysts add back the "LIFO reserve" — the cumulative difference between LIFO and FIFO inventory values disclosed in the notes — to convert the LIFO company's balance sheet inventory to a FIFO basis. This makes the comparison apples-to-apples.
COGS on the Income Statement
COGS appears on the income statement immediately below revenue. The structure is identical across virtually every company that sells physical goods:
From gross profit, operating expenses (SG&A, R&D, depreciation of non-production assets) are subtracted to reach operating profit (EBIT). Below that comes interest expense and taxes. COGS is the first and typically largest deduction — setting the ceiling for everything that follows.
For investors reading a 10-K or annual report, COGS is usually a single line. For management accounts and segment reporting, it may be broken into sub-components: materials, direct labour, and production overhead. This granularity is where genuine operational insight lives.
The Gross Margin Connection
COGS and gross margin are two sides of the same coin. Gross margin is simply gross profit expressed as a percentage of revenue:
Equivalently: Gross Margin % = 1 − (COGS ÷ Revenue). A 60% gross margin means every $1 of revenue retains $0.60 after production costs.
This percentage is one of the most-watched metrics in financial analysis because it reflects pricing power and operational efficiency simultaneously. A company that can hold its gross margin flat while growing revenue is doing two things right: selling at strong prices and keeping production costs in check.
A Tale of Two Margins
Consider two competing software hardware companies, both generating $50 million in annual revenue.
| Metric | Company A | Company B |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue | $50,000,000 | $50,000,000 |
| COGS | $18,500,000 | $29,000,000 |
| Gross Profit | $31,500,000 | $21,000,000 |
| Gross Margin | 63% | 42% |
Both have the same revenue, but Company A's production machine is far more efficient. Every dollar of revenue retains 63 cents before covering any overhead. Company B retains only 42 cents — meaning it has 21 cents less per dollar to cover the same kinds of selling, administrative, and financing costs. At scale, that gap compounds into a significant profit and reinvestment advantage.
COGS Across Industries
COGS ratios vary enormously by sector, which is why cross-industry comparisons are almost meaningless. A manufacturer at 70% COGS-to-revenue is not "worse" than a software company at 15% — they're in structurally different businesses.
| Industry | Typical COGS % of Revenue | Key Driver |
|---|---|---|
| Grocery / Food retail | 70–80% | Low-margin commodity products, high volume |
| Automobile manufacturing | 75–85% | Steel, components, and direct labour-intensive assembly |
| Pharmaceuticals | 20–35% | High IP value, low marginal production cost once R&D is sunk |
| Software (SaaS) | 10–25% | Hosting, support, and minimal incremental delivery cost |
| Luxury goods | 25–45% | Craftsmanship premium, brand pricing power offsets material cost |
| Restaurants | 28–35% | Food and beverage cost; labour typically in operating expenses |
| Electronics / Consumer hardware | 50–70% | Component costs, assembly, supply chain exposure |
The right benchmark is always a company's own trend over time, plus peers in the same sub-sector. A supermarket with a 72% COGS-to-revenue ratio deserves a very different reaction than a medical device company with the same ratio.
What a Rising COGS Really Signals
When COGS rises faster than revenue — meaning the COGS-to-revenue ratio expands — gross margin contracts. This is one of the most reliable early warnings of trouble in a product business. But the cause matters enormously before drawing conclusions.
Reading the Signal Correctly
Input cost inflation
Raw material prices have risen faster than the company can pass through to customers. Common in commodity-exposed industries (food, packaging, metals). A temporary headwind if the company has pricing power; a structural problem if it doesn't.
Product mix shift
The business is selling more of its lower-margin products and less of its high-margin ones. Revenue holds steady, but average COGS per dollar of revenue rises. Often visible in segment disclosures before it hits the consolidated gross margin line.
Operational inefficiency
Scrap rates, rework, production downtime, or labour overtime costs are rising. This reflects an internal problem — poor process management — rather than an external market condition. It typically requires operational intervention, not a pricing response.
Deliberate margin investment
Sometimes a rising COGS ratio is intentional — the business is investing in higher-quality materials, faster delivery, or better customer service built into the product cost. Context from management commentary is essential here: the same number can mean deterioration or deliberate positioning.
Inventory write-downs
Spoiled, obsolete, or unsellable inventory gets written down — reducing the balance sheet value of inventory and increasing COGS. A sudden spike in COGS without a matching revenue increase often has an inventory write-down hiding inside it.
If a company changes its inventory accounting method — switching from LIFO to FIFO, for example — COGS figures are not comparable across that boundary without adjusting for the change. Companies are required to disclose such changes and restate prior periods under most accounting standards, but the adjustment is often buried in the notes.
Common Misconceptions
COGS seems straightforward until you encounter one of these persistent misunderstandings:
Key Takeaways
- COGS captures only direct production costs — raw materials, direct labour, and manufacturing overhead. Operating expenses (SG&A, marketing, admin) are categorically excluded.
- The COGS formula is straightforward: Beginning Inventory + Purchases − Ending Inventory = COGS. What matters is how you value the inventory that flows through.
- Inventory method changes the number materially. In an inflationary period: FIFO → lowest COGS, highest profit. LIFO → highest COGS, lowest profit (and tax bill). Weighted average sits between both.
- LIFO is prohibited under IFRS — only US GAAP allows it. Never compare a LIFO company with a FIFO company without adjusting for the LIFO reserve.
- COGS benchmarks are sector-specific. A 70% COGS ratio is unremarkable in grocery, alarming in SaaS. Always compare against industry peers and prior periods.
- Rising COGS-to-revenue is a diagnostic, not a verdict. It could mean input cost inflation, product mix shifts, operational inefficiency, or deliberate quality investment — check the notes and management commentary before concluding anything.
Quick Quiz
Four questions to check your understanding. Click an answer to reveal the explanation.
1. A company has beginning inventory of $40,000, purchases $85,000 of goods during the quarter, and ends with $28,000 of inventory remaining. What is COGS?
2. Which inventory costing method is prohibited under IFRS but permitted under US GAAP?
3. In a period of rising input prices, which inventory method produces the lowest COGS and highest reported gross profit?
4. Which of the following costs would NOT be included in COGS for a manufacturing company?