What Is Inventory Turnover?

Inventory turnover is a great indicator of how efficiently your company turns inventory into sales. This ratio indicates how many times the inventory is sold during a certain period of time -- over a year, for example
. Knowing how to calculate inventory turnover rate will help you to plan future inventory purchases and optimize your stock. 
Days In Inventory
* (DII) helps you to understand inventory turnover even better because it puts the ratio into a daily context. The DII value shows the average number of days it takes you to sell the current inventory on hand. Generally, a higher inventory turnover (but lower inventory turnover period) is preferred, but it varies from one industry to another. These numbers are important because they influence a significant source of your profit, the margin. A decrease in inventory turnover means that stock is moving slower and you’re selling 
fewer goods are being sold or you’ve had to lower the markup rate for some reason. This will lower your margin. Investors are interested in knowing how liquid your company’s inventory is and how fast you can turn it into cash. If it can’t be sold, it’s worthless to your company and to potential business partners. *Also known as days sale of inventory (DSI), days inventory outstanding (DIO), days inventory, inventory period, inventory turnover period, or simply average days to sell the inventory.

How to Calculate Inventory Turnover?

The turnover ratio can be calculated by dividing sales or the cost of goods sold (COGS)
with the average inventory. You can find Sales and COGS values on the income statement. The Company’s balance sheet reports the
inventory
on hand. The average inventory can be found by dividing the sum of the starting and ending inventory values.
 Using COGS to find your inventory turnover is more accurate and realistic as it doesn’t include the markup. On the other hand, using sales is very common and might be necessary for comparative analysis.

Example of How to Calculate Inventory Turnover

Inventory at the beginning of the year: $100 000Inventory by the end of the year: $120 000Sales: $1 000 000COGS: $600 000 Average inventory = (100 000 + 120 000) / 2 = $110 000 Based on sales: Inventory turnover = sales / average inventory1 000 000 / 110 000 = 9,09 Days in inventory = time period / inventory turnover = time period x (average inventory / sales)365 / 9,09 = 365 x (110 000 / 1 000 000) = 40,15 days Based on COGS: Inventory turnover = COGS / average inventory600 000 / 110 000 = 5,45 Days in inventory = time period / inventory turnover = time period x (average inventory / COGS)365 / 2,27 = 365 x (110 000 / 600 000) = 66,97 days

High Inventory Turnover

The goodThe bad

Low Inventory Turnover

The goodThe bad

DON'T FORGET!