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Inventory shrinkage

Inventory shrinkage is the shortfall between inventory per the accounting records and what a physical stock count finds, caused by theft, damage or counting error, and written off to cost of sales.

ByHoang TruongUpdated

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A retailer's perpetual inventory system shows a closing balance of €36,000, but a physical count at year end values the stock at only €34,560. The shrinkage is €36,000 − €34,560 = €1,440, written off by debiting cost of sales and crediting inventory, bringing the recorded balance down to match what staff actually counted.

Where it fits
SubjectFinancial AccountingCoreTopicInventory & COGSCore

The formula

LaTeX
S=IbookIphysicalS = I_{book} - I_{physical}

Variables

Inventory shrinkage ()
Book (recorded) inventory ()
Physical count inventory ()

Gives the euro value of missing inventory to be written off to cost of sales.

Check yourself

PracticeCORE

At year end, a retailer's perpetual inventory records show closing inventory of €52,000. A physical stock count values the inventory actually on the shelves at €50,050. What entry does the retailer make to record the difference, and for how much?

Select an answer to check your understanding.