
Picture this: you're running a creative business—maybe you're printing band merch, selling handcrafted instruments, or stocking art supplies. You've got boxes of product sitting in your warehouse, and every one of those boxes represents cash that's not in your bank account. Here's the kicker: how you track, value, and account for those boxes can be the difference between a chart-topping profit and a financial flop that leaves you scrambling at tax time.
If you've ever wondered why your accountant keeps banging on about stocktakes and inventory valuation methods, or if terms like "FIFO" and "net realisable value" sound like band names rather than accounting concepts, you're in the right place. Let's break down inventory accounting in a way that actually makes sense—no boring textbook jargon, just the real deal you need to know.
Inventory accounting is the systematic process of tracking, recording, and valuing the stuff you've got on hand that's destined to be sold, transformed, or used in your business operations. Think of it as keeping tabs on your backstage pass collection—except instead of memories, you're tracking assets that directly impact your bottom line.
According to Australian Accounting Standard AASB 102 (the rulebook we all play by down under), inventory includes anything you're holding for sale in the ordinary course of business, products in the process of being made, or materials and supplies that'll be consumed during production. Whether you're sitting on guitar pedals, screen-printed tees, or bags of coffee beans, it's all inventory—and it all needs proper accounting.
Here's why inventory accounting matters more than you might think: for most retail and manufacturing businesses, inventory is the biggest current asset sitting on the balance sheet. Get your inventory accounting wrong, and you're not just risking compliance headaches with the Australian Taxation Office (ATO)—you're potentially overpaying tax, misrepresenting your financial position, and making business decisions based on wonky numbers.
In Australia, every business must account for the value of their trading stock at the end of each income year and at the start of the next. There's no "I'll deal with it later" option here. The ATO expects you to have your inventory sorted, and AASB 102 provides the framework for how to do it properly.
The golden rule? Inventory must be measured at the lower of cost and net realisable value (NRV). This means if you've got stock that cost you $10,000 but you could only sell it for $8,000 today (after accounting for selling costs), you've got to value it at $8,000 on your books. No wishful thinking allowed.
Choosing an inventory valuation method is like choosing between analogue and digital recording—both can work brilliantly, but you need to pick the right one for your setup and stick with it. In Australia, you've got three main methods that comply with AASB 102, plus one specialised approach for unique items.
First-In, First-Out (FIFO) assumes you're selling your oldest stock first—like a record shop rotating their display so vintage vinyl doesn't gather dust. Under FIFO, your ending inventory consists of the most recently purchased items, which means it's valued at current or near-current costs. This method is brilliant for businesses with perishable goods or products with limited shelf life. During inflationary periods (which, let's face it, is most of the time), FIFO results in lower Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) and higher net income—which sounds great until you realise you might be paying more tax.
Weighted Average Cost (WAC) takes all your inventory costs and averages them out, regardless of when you bought each item. The formula is straightforward: Total Cost of Goods Available for Sale ÷ Total Number of Units Available = Average Cost per Unit. This method smooths out price fluctuations like a good compressor evens out vocals. It's ideal for businesses with homogeneous products—think bulk materials, liquids, or situations where individual items aren't easily distinguished from each other. WAC works particularly well with perpetual inventory systems that recalculate the average after each purchase.
Specific Identification tracks each inventory item individually by its actual purchase cost. This is the boutique method—perfect for high-value, unique items like vintage guitars, original artwork, or custom-built equipment. It's the most accurate method for determining actual costs, but it's also time-consuming and impractical for businesses shifting high volumes of similar products.
Here's where Australian accounting diverges from our American cousins: Last-In, First-Out (LIFO) is banned under AASB 102 and IFRS. While it's still permitted under US GAAP, LIFO doesn't fly in Australia. The method assumes you're selling your newest stock first, which rarely matches physical reality and can create seriously outdated inventory values on your balance sheet. If you're doing business internationally and come across LIFO, just know it's off the table for Australian financial reporting.
If you're a small business with an aggregated turnover under $10 million and your trading stock value has changed by no more than $5,000 during the year, congratulations—you've unlocked the simplified trading stock rules. You don't need to conduct a formal stocktake or account for changes in stock value. It's the accounting equivalent of the "easy mode" setting, and if you qualify, it can save you significant time and hassle.
The choice between perpetual and periodic inventory systems is fundamental to how you'll run your operation. It's like choosing between tracking your practice sessions in real-time with an app versus writing them down in a notebook at the end of each week—both get the job done, but the experience is wildly different.
| Feature | Perpetual System | Periodic System |
|---|---|---|
| Update Frequency | Real-time with each transaction | End of accounting period only |
| Technology Requirements | POS systems, barcode scanning, inventory software | Manual counts, basic spreadsheets |
| COGS Calculation | Immediate with each sale | End of period: Beginning Inventory + Purchases - Ending Inventory |
| Cost | Higher (software, hardware, training) | Lower (minimal technology needed) |
| Accuracy | Continuous visibility, easier to spot issues | Less visibility between counts |
| Best For | Larger businesses, retail chains, high-volume sellers | Small businesses, low transaction volumes, limited budgets |
| Physical Counts | Periodic verification still recommended | Full count required each period |
With a perpetual inventory system, your inventory records update continuously as purchases and sales happen. When you buy stock, you debit your Inventory account and credit Accounts Payable (or Cash). When you sell, you make two entries: one to record the revenue (debit Cash/Accounts Receivable, credit Sales Revenue) and another to record the cost (debit Cost of Goods Sold, credit Inventory). Your inventory balance is always current, giving you real-time visibility of stock levels.
The advantages are compelling: you can prevent stockouts, identify theft or shrinkage immediately, make informed purchasing decisions, and integrate with sophisticated inventory optimisation tools. The downside? Higher upfront and ongoing costs, plus the need for proper training and maintenance. Still, for growing businesses or those with multiple locations, perpetual systems are often worth the investment.
Periodic inventory systems update records at scheduled intervals—typically at the end of your accounting period—based on physical inventory counts. When you purchase stock, it goes into a temporary "Purchases" account, not directly to Inventory. No COGS entry happens when you make a sale; instead, you calculate COGS at period end using the formula: Beginning Inventory + Purchases - Ending Inventory = COGS.
This old-school approach works beautifully for small businesses with simple inventory, low transaction volumes, and tight budgets. Setup is quick and inexpensive, and you don't need fancy technology. The trade-off? No real-time visibility, delayed financial reporting, and a more time-consuming process when you do your end-of-period count.
Here's where inventory accounting gets real: sometimes, the stuff on your shelves isn't worth what you paid for it. Maybe technology has moved on, consumer tastes have shifted, or products have been damaged. When this happens, you can't just pretend everything's fine—AASB 102 requires you to write down or write off inventory that's lost value.
Obsolete inventory is stock that can no longer be sold at its original price (or at all) due to technological obsolescence, changed consumer preferences, damage, spoilage, or market shifts. Think of a music store stuck with cassette players in the streaming era, or an art supply shop with paint that's dried up in the tubes.
The causes are varied: outdated products, changes in demand, physical damage, expired shelf life, overproduction, economic downturns, or regulatory changes. Whatever the reason, once you've identified obsolete inventory, you need to assess its net realisable value and record an impairment.
A write-down is a partial reduction when your inventory's market value falls below cost but the items still retain some value—like marking band merch down 50% for clearance. You're reflecting the lower of cost or net realisable value.
A write-off is the complete removal of inventory value when items have no remaining value whatsoever—think fire damage, complete spoilage, or products so obsolete they're literally unsellable.
For minor write-downs, you can include them in Cost of Goods Sold:
Debit: Cost of Goods Sold $X
Credit: Inventory $X
For significant write-downs (generally 5% or more of total inventory), create a separate line item:
Debit: Inventory Write-Down Expense $X
Credit: Allowance for Obsolete Inventory $X
For complete write-offs:
Debit: Loss on Inventory Write-Off $X
Credit: Inventory Account $X
Here's something worth noting: under AASB 102, if circumstances change and the reasons for a write-down no longer exist (maybe that recalled phone version suddenly makes your old phone cases relevant again), you can reverse the write-down—but only up to the original amount. You can't increase the value above what you initially paid.
Australian businesses operate under a specific set of rules when it comes to inventory accounting, and ignoring them is like trying to tour without work visas—it’s going to catch up with you eventually.
Every Australian business must account for the value of their trading stock at the end of each income year. This means conducting a stocktake—a physical inventory count—as close as possible to year-end. You need to count all products and goods held for sale, materials and supplies in your warehouse, work-in-progress, and even trading stock used for private purposes (which must be accounted for as if sold).
The benefits of a proper stocktake extend beyond compliance: you'll identify shrinkage, theft, or gaps; get accurate closing inventory for tax purposes; find slow-moving stock before it becomes obsolete; improve cash flow management; and detect damaged inventory early.
Your financial statements must disclose:
These disclosures aren't optional—they're fundamental to transparent financial reporting and help stakeholders understand the true state of your business.
AASB 102 is specific about what costs you must include in inventory valuation:
Include: Purchase price, import duties and non-recoverable taxes, transport and handling costs directly attributable to acquisition (less trade discounts and rebates), direct costs of production (direct labour, direct materials), variable production overheads, and systematically allocated fixed production overheads based on normal capacity.
Exclude: Abnormal amounts of wasted materials or labour, storage costs (unless necessary for production), administrative overheads that don't contribute to bringing inventory to its present location and condition, selling costs, and freight-out or delivery costs.
Getting this right matters because incorrectly capitalising costs into inventory (or failing to include costs that should be capitalised) distorts your financial position and your reported profitability.
The difference between inventory accounting that amplifies your business success and inventory accounting that becomes a painful feedback loop often comes down to implementation and consistency.
Choose your method and stick with it. Once you've selected an inventory valuation method, you need to apply it consistently. Changes require disclosure and justification—you can't switch methods every year to achieve desired accounting outcomes.
Embrace technology appropriately. You don't need a million-dollar ERP system if you're a small creative business, but even basic inventory management software can dramatically reduce errors and improve efficiency. As you grow, technology becomes less optional and more essential.
Document everything. Keep detailed records of purchases, sales, adjustments, write-offs, and write-downs. This documentation supports compliance, provides an audit trail, and gives you data to inform business decisions. Think of it as your session notes—you'll thank yourself later.
Conduct regular reviews. Don't wait until year-end to discover you're sitting on $50,000 of obsolete inventory. Regular reviews help you identify issues early, make informed pricing decisions, and avoid massive year-end write-offs that hammer your profitability.
Segregate duties. Separate the functions of counting inventory, recording transactions, and authorising adjustments. This internal control reduces the risk of errors and fraud—it's basic band management: don't let the same person handle the till and do the reconciliation.
Monitor net realisable value continuously. Especially if you're in an industry prone to rapid obsolescence (like technology or fashion), regularly assess whether your inventory's market value has fallen below cost. The sooner you recognise impairments, the less painful they'll be.
Inventory accounting might not be the most exciting aspect of running a creative business—let's be honest, it's not quite as thrilling as launching a new product line or landing a major client. But get it right, and it becomes the solid rhythm section that holds your entire financial structure together.
Understanding whether FIFO or weighted average cost works better for your situation, choosing between perpetual and periodic systems based on your actual needs (not just what's trendy), and staying on top of write-downs before they become write-offs—these aren't just compliance exercises. They're strategic decisions that impact your cash flow, your tax position, your borrowing capacity, and ultimately your ability to grow.
For creative professionals and businesses, inventory often represents a significant investment of resources. Whether you're stocking musical equipment, art supplies, printed materials, or handcrafted goods, every dollar tied up in inventory is a dollar that's not available for other opportunities. Proper inventory accounting gives you the visibility and control you need to optimise that investment.
The Australian regulatory environment—with AASB 102 compliance, ATO requirements for annual stocktakes, and the specific rules around trading stock valuation—provides a clear framework. It's not about making things difficult; it's about ensuring transparency, consistency, and accuracy in financial reporting. When you play by these rules, you're not just ticking compliance boxes—you're building a foundation of reliable financial information that helps you make better business decisions.
Inventory accounting is the financial side—tracking the monetary value of inventory, recording transactions in your books, calculating Cost of Goods Sold, and complying with accounting standards like AASB 102. Stock control (or inventory management) is the operational side—physically managing items, tracking quantities, preventing stockouts, and optimising reorder points. Both are necessary: stock control tells you what you've got and where it is; inventory accounting tells you what it's worth and how it impacts your financial statements.
Technically yes, but it's not a casual decision. Once you choose a method (FIFO, weighted average cost, or specific identification), you must apply it consistently. Changing methods requires disclosure in your financial statements, explaining why the change was made and how it affects your results. Accounting standards and the ATO expect consistency, so a legitimate business reason is necessary before switching methods.
Yes, absolutely. Even with real-time tracking through a perpetual inventory system, regular physical counts are essential to verify that your records match reality. Mistakes, theft, or system glitches can occur, so periodic physical counts help identify and correct discrepancies, ensuring the accuracy of your inventory records.
Failing to write down obsolete inventory means you’re overstating your assets and understating your expenses, leading to inaccurate financial reporting. This misrepresentation can lead to poor business decisions, complications during audits, and potential tax issues with the ATO, as your inventory remains recorded at a higher value than what it’s worth.
Inventory accounting affects your taxable income through the Cost of Goods Sold calculation. A higher closing inventory value means lower COGS and higher taxable income, while lower inventory values—due to write-downs or write-offs—raise COGS and lower taxable income. The chosen valuation method (FIFO vs weighted average) and proper handling of obsolete stock can significantly impact your tax position.
Sign up to receive relevant advice for your business.