Item Costing
If you use both the Accounting and Inventory features, you need to track the total value of your assets and to calculate profits you make. You can set up your NetSuite account to track inventory costing, which are the costs associated with goods and services you sell.
Each time you buy and sell inventory items, you need to track the cost of your items throughout the purchase and sale processes. The cost of an item you buy or sell affects your general ledger accounts.
Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) and the General Ledger
A Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) account isn't an expense account, but it works like one. To calculate your company's gross profit, subtract the inventory costing total from the income total before expenses.
The cost of an item is associated with income and expenses (overhead) and aren't directly tied with the sale of an item.
Item Cost
Item cost comes from the price of the item on the purchase order.
When you determine the cost of an item, account for costs associated with buying the same items at different purchase prices over time. For example, sometimes you pay your vendor $10 for each calculator, and other times it's $15. You can choose a costing method to decide how NetSuite handles these variances.
The exact cost assigned to an item depends on the costing method you choose. For more information, see Setting a Default Inventory Costing Method and System Cost of Goods Sold Adjustments.
Inventory Costing Preferences
You can select your preferences for handling inventory costing. For more information, see Setting Inventory Costing Preferences.
Costing and Verifying Decimal Precision
NetSuite calculates and reports inventory costs using decimal precision that's based on your chosen currency's format.
The decimal precision shown in the Format field of a currency record is used for inventory costing calculations and can't be changed. This keeps your inventory costing and reporting consistent.
For example, you selected USD (United States Dollar) as the currency for an item on the item record and the format is USD. The decimal precision for that item's costing and reporting is two decimal places.
Standard Costing is an exception. NetSuite calculates Standard Costing with decimal precision to seven places. For example, 9.87654321 is calculated as 9.8765432. For more information, see Standard Costing.
To verify the decimal precision for a currency:
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Go to Lists > Accounting > Currencies.
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Click the name of the currency.
The selected format shows in the Format field.
The decimal precision for that format shows in the Format Sample field.
Related Topics
- Costing Methods
- Selecting a Default Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) Account
- Inventory Costing and Assembly Items
- LIFO/FIFO Inventory Costing and Advanced Receiving
- Viewing Inventory Reports
- Inventory Costing Recalculations
- Troubleshoot Inventory Costing
- Cost Accounting Status on Item Records
- Item Return Costing
- Group Average Costing
- Using Item Records
- Item Pricing
- Multiple Units of Measure
- Bar Codes and Item Labels
- Item Types
- Customer Part Number
- Effective Date Pricing SuiteApp
- Item Record Management