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Nymotion
New Member

Customer prepays inventory

We are a small manufacturer and our inventory costs are high.  As our end product contained oem components that have "no return" policies we require new customers to prepay 50% of our Bill of Materials costs.  In June 2017 we invoiced a customer for $ 20K (50%) of the BoM to be used in a purchase order.  We purchased the full BoM, $ 40K, but our customer's end customer delayed their order until Jan 2018.    We sat on $ 40K in inventory for five months.

 

Our accounting method is CASH so this is tricky.  Do I report the $ 20K as "income" in 2017 or can I report this "income" in 2018 where we shipped, billed and were paid in full?  

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1 Reply
Carl
Level 15

Customer prepays inventory

Because you use the cash method of accounting you don't have a choice on this. The income is reported as such in the tax year that money is received. Period. Then as you already know, what you paid for the inventory is not deductible until the tax year you actually sell the product.

We sat on $ 40K in inventory for five months.

Doesn't matter. The $20K received by you in 2017 is income and that's really not up for debate by either of us.  What's also not up for debate by either of us is the fact that what you pay for inventory is not deductible until the tax year you actually sell that inventory. So even if you purchased the inventory 50 years ago, what you paid for that inventory is not deductible until the tax year you actually sell that inventory.  So if the $20K received in 2017 puts you in a higher tax bracket, that's basically just to bad. It sucks I know. But it is what it is.

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