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New Member
posted May 31, 2019 4:47:05 PM

What is the difference between cost of purchases and materials and supplies?

I am a dressmaker. I purchase fabric and materials that go into the final product (fabric, thread, interfacings). I also purchase items that are consumed during the manufacturing process (pattern paper, rotary blades, etc.). Do I classify each of these things as "cost of purchases" or "materials and supplies"?

Where would I put items such as labels? "Cost of Purchases" or "Materials and Supplies"?

I also have expenses such as fabric sample cards that I use to show my clients in order to sell fabrics for dresses. What would this be classified under?

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23 Replies
New Member
May 31, 2019 4:47:06 PM

Hi!  Would I only consider "cost of purchases" as a finished item purchased for resell only??  What if I am making an item from raw materials?  Would those materials be considered "materials and supplies" instead?

Level 4
May 31, 2019 4:47:08 PM

Hi klnickols!

That is a great question!

Generally materials that are included in your cost of goods sold are any items that can be specifically identified with a finished product.  They are also items that are consumed in the production of your inventory.  Your fabric is a good example of this.  

Supplies that are not included in your cost of goods sold are items that are used multiple times even if they are used to produce your inventory.  Needles are a good example here.  I would say your fabric sample cards are also included in this category.  Patterns are also a good example of a supply expense.  You may purchase a pattern and only use it once, but since you do not sell it with the item it would be a supply rather than a material.

 Items you include in cost of goods sold should also be countable.  For example you can tell how many yards of fabric you have left.  This is countable.  This is important because anything you report as cost of goods sold has to be inventoried at the end of the year to come up with your ending inventory.  Your ending inventory includes items that were made but not sold and raw materials waiting to be made into items for sale.

You can also look to the price of the supplies.  You do not need to track in inventory items that cost your pennies each.  While there is not a set amount to make this decision it does not make sense to spend more money and time to track and inventory an item that it costs to buy it.

I hope this helps.  If it does not adequately address your concern, please reply to this post so that I may continue to assist you.

Thank you for using Turbo Tax!

New Member
May 31, 2019 4:47:08 PM

Great explanation! Thanks!

New Member
May 31, 2019 4:47:10 PM

I have a complicated question that sort of follows this thread. My wife has turned her hobby of making girls hair bows and clips into a business. She has spools of ribbon that may have cost $1.00-$3.00 each and she has hundreds of these spools. Some were purchased in 2013 when she turned the hobby into a business and some were accumulated when it was a hobby.. Should she unravel each spool to determine how many total yards she has? We have the receipts from the purchases so can we add up the inventory that way?

Level 4
May 31, 2019 4:47:10 PM

I hate to say, "unravel the spools", but you do need an accurate way to value your inventory.  For the future I would suggest your wife develop a simple way to track her ribbon usage.  If she uses the same amount of ribbon for each bow she could simply use tick marks on the ribbon package.  If the amount varies from bow to bow a log sheet might be easier.  It doesn't need to be complicated.

New Member
May 31, 2019 4:47:14 PM

How about we add yarn to the question....I decided to turn my hobby into a business as well and trying to get a grip on taxes. I did my inventory of completed items (62 hats) and I have receipts for all the yarn bought in 2013 but I don't have # of skeins of yarn at each price point.  It sounds like I need to add my finished product inventory AND my yarn stash?  Plus if I make my own hats, how do I know how to value them--I know it is one price to buy them and a different to sell them but should I give a fixed price to each size and use that as my cost?

Level 4
May 31, 2019 4:47:16 PM

Your ending inventory would include your finished product and your unused yarn.  The value of your finished hats would be based on the amount of yarn and other notions needed to produce the hat.

Level 15
May 31, 2019 4:47:18 PM

removed

New Member
May 31, 2019 4:47:20 PM

So what would be considered "Cost of Purchases"?  I understand materials and supplies but am a bit confused on what to state for Cost Of Purchases.  I have a shop and sell craft items which take multiple pieces to produce the final product. I listed these items as Materials & Supplies.

Level 4
May 31, 2019 4:47:21 PM

Cost of purchases are generally the cost for pre-made items that you can resell without much alteration.

New Member
May 31, 2019 4:47:23 PM

I have another problem....at first I just estimated our inventory...now I just keep it the same every year...after this year my inventory increased because I had an order canceled and stuck with the finish product...then I have material that hasn't been used due to my customer discontinuing the item from her catalog....how can I fix this?

New Member
May 31, 2019 4:47:25 PM

I have prints done of my artwork that I sell should they be listed under "Cost of Purchases"? Since I payed for them.

New Member
May 31, 2019 4:47:27 PM

If you sell less that $1 million dollars a year it is not required to know your ending inventory if you are a dressmaker, crafter, etc.

New Member
May 31, 2019 4:47:29 PM

Hi I am a Product Developer and my material costs are specific for making prototypes of consumer products in the attempt of Licensing to a manufacturer and also making small batches of samples (50 or so) that may or may not be sold. Sold products are for the testing by the end user and trying to obtain product feedback but they keep the product afterwards. Unsold products would be provided at no charge to manufacturers for review and consideration of Licensing opportunities.  Where is the best place for separating material costs and do I report sales of these products to individuals?  Is there a credit available for product provided without compensation?

Level 4
May 31, 2019 4:47:31 PM

If you produce a product that is sold to someone else inventory/cost of goods sold is still the most appropriate place to record the materials costs.  This is true no matter what your customer may do with the product you sell.  If you have items that are specifically identifiable in the final product you will record them under the inventory section as materials.  If the item is not specifically identifiable (like glue or screws, etc) then these items do not need to be inventoried and can be recorded as a supply expenses under other common business expenses.

You should record the sell of your product no mater who you sell it too.  Sales to individuals is reported the same as sales to a manufacturer.

There is not a credit for product given away.  You get the deduction for this product when you take them out of your ending inventory.  The deduction is the amount it cost you to produce the product and not the amount you could have sold the product for.  To take the deduction, when you calculate your ending inventory, treat the product given away the same as you do the product sold.  For example, if in beginning inventory you had 2 items and made 10 more during the year you would have 12 items to sell during the year.  If you sold 5 of them and gave 3 of them away your ending inventory would be 4 items.  You would then be able to deduct the cost of the 8 items you "sold" during the year.

Returning Member
Aug 28, 2021 12:00:57 PM

HI--Can you clarify something for me? In the example below, you say that supplies NOT included in Cost of goods sold, which are are supplies like needles that are used over and over for production of inventory.  BUT in the program, materials and supplies are BOTH listed under CGS, not separately. 

 

The Cost of purchases I have determined are items that are sold but don't need much alteration (such as a tshirt that I embroider on) . 

 

I am confused on "Materials and supplies" which are a separate category, but together.  How do I separate out materials, which were determined to be "fabric" in the 2019 example and "needles" were in the supplies category, which was stated is NOT to be included in cost of goods sold, yet you outline it in the example as a "supply" expense.  If you could clarify what category would patterns, needles, scissors would be, if not "materials and supplies" under Cost of Goods sold, where would they go?  Business expense?  Thank you!

Returning Member
Feb 20, 2022 3:06:57 PM

so would the cost of purchase be the same as end of inventory? so if i had beginning of inventory at $2000 and end of inventory at $800 (which was the total amount of new products that  i purchased throughout the year) would i reenter the 800 as my cost of purchase?

Expert Alumni
Feb 20, 2022 3:37:24 PM

Yes.  The cost of purchases should be entered as the amount you spent during the year on inventory purchases.

 

@depinat1

Returning Member
Feb 20, 2022 3:40:08 PM

thank you so much so what would be my ending inventory? would that be the same as my beginning inventory since i didnt have any sales last year?

Level 8
Feb 20, 2022 4:24:36 PM

As long as there wasn't inventory which was lost, stolen or otherwise ruined, the beginning and ending inventory would be the same if you had no sales during the year.

Returning Member
Mar 12, 2022 1:06:32 PM

hello i noticed that when i put value of inventory at  the  end of year it drastically decreases ,y federal refund by almost 900 dollars why is that when i havent made any money from  the business?

thanks in advance

Returning Member
Mar 12, 2022 1:25:35 PM

question so if my beginning value was 3800 and i sold 93 dollars would i deduct 3800 from 93 dollars and this would be my ending value.

Level 8
Mar 13, 2022 12:19:01 PM

If you are saying that you sold $93 , was that the cost of the items you sold or was that your revenue (the amount you received).  If it was the cost of the items you sold, then yes that would be how to get to ending inventory. Actually the opposite of what you wrote (3800-93).

 However, you may have to circumstances like theft that may affect ending inventory. If there was no theft or did not use it for personal life, then the ending inventory would be the beginning inventory minus the cost of the items you sold.