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What Is Inventory Turnover? How to Calculate and Improve It (2026)

Waveon Team - 작성자

Waveon Team

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Most operations teams track revenue. Fewer track how fast their inventory is actually moving — and that gap is where cash quietly disappears.

Inventory turnover tells you how many times your stock is sold and replaced within a given period. A business generating $5M in revenue with $2M tied up in slow-moving inventory has a very different problem than one running the same revenue with $400K in stock. If you don't know your current ratio, you're operating on an assumption.

What Is Inventory Turnover and Why It Actually Matters

Inventory turnover measures how many times a company sells through its average inventory within a year. The higher the ratio, the more efficiently inventory is being converted into revenue — but context matters as much as the number itself. A ratio of 4 might be excellent for a furniture retailer and catastrophic for a grocery distributor.

What inventory turnover actually reveals:

  • Working capital efficiency — Low turnover means cash is frozen in stock that isn't moving.

  • Demand forecasting accuracy — Consistently low turnover signals purchasing isn't aligned with actual sales velocity.

  • Obsolescence risk — The longer inventory sits, the higher the risk of markdowns and write-offs.

A useful companion metric is Days Inventory Outstanding (DIO) — calculated as 365 ÷ turnover ratio. If your turnover is 6, inventory sits an average of 61 days before it's sold.

Inventory Turnover Formula and How to Calculate It

Inventory Turnover Formula and How to Calculate ItImage: StockTurnover.net

Inventory Turnover = Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) ÷ Average Inventory

  • COGS = Total cost of goods sold (not revenue — using sales figures inflates the ratio)

  • Average Inventory = (Beginning Inventory + Ending Inventory) ÷ 2

Worked example — mid-sized wholesale distributor:

  • Annual COGS: $3,200,000

  • Average inventory: ($480,000 + $560,000) ÷ 2 = $520,000

  • Inventory Turnover = $3,200,000 ÷ $520,000 = 6.15

This company turns inventory ~6 times per year, or once every 59 days. Whether that's strong or weak depends on the industry.

Inventory Turnover Benchmarks by Industry

Inventory Turnover Benchmarks by IndustryImage: StockTurnover.net

There's no universal benchmark — the right number depends on product perishability, sales cycle, and supply chain structure. Industry averages give you a meaningful reference point.

Industry

Avg. Turnover Ratio

Days in Inventory

Key Driver

Grocery / Food & Beverage

14 – 20+

18 – 26 days

Perishability, high purchase frequency

General Retail

8 – 12

30 – 46 days

Broad product mix, promotional cycles

Fashion / Apparel

6 – 12

30 – 61 days

Seasonality, trend cycles

Electronics

6 – 9

41 – 61 days

Rapid obsolescence

Wholesale / Distribution

6 – 9

41 – 61 days

Bulk purchasing, B2B order cycles

Manufacturing

4 – 6

61 – 91 days

Production lead times, raw material buffers

Furniture / Home Goods

3 – 5

73 – 122 days

High unit cost, long buying cycle

Automotive Parts

3 – 6

61 – 122 days

SKU complexity, safety stock requirements

The cross-sector average in 2024 sits around 8.5, with retail closer to 11.3. Use the benchmark as a start

ing point, not a ceiling — the best operators often run at 200–400% of the industry average by tightening reorder timing and cutting dead SKUs.

Why Your Inventory Turnover Ratio Is Low — 3 Root Causes

① Demand forecasting is disconnected from purchasing Buying decisions driven by gut feel or supplier minimums — rather than actual sales velocity — consistently produce more stock than the market pulls. Cash gets tied up either way.

② SKU proliferation is diluting your sell-through The 80/20 rule applies: 20% of SKUs typically drive 80% of revenue. When product lines expand without demand data, slow-moving items accumulate and drag down the overall ratio. Carrying 200 underperforming SKUs often costs more in holding expense than the margin they return.

③ Reorder timing is based on calendar, not signals Fixed monthly or quarterly ordering means excess stock during slow periods and scrambling during demand spikes. Safety stock buffers that ignore demand variability make this worse.

5 Strategies to Improve Your Inventory Turnover

1. Run an ABC Analysis on Your SKU Portfolio

Segment inventory into three tiers — A items (top 10–20% of SKUs, ~70–80% of revenue), B items (moderate contributors), and C items (low velocity, high carrying cost). Apply tighter reorder policies to A items and aggressively rationalize C items. Cutting underperformers is one of the fastest levers available.

2. Right-Size Safety Stock with Demand Variability

Most businesses set safety stock on a flat rule of thumb. A more precise approach: Safety Stock = Z-score × σ (demand std dev) × √(lead time). Moving from a blanket 30-day buffer to demand-weighted buffers by SKU category reduces average inventory without increasing stockout risk.

3. Shorten Reorder Cycles for Fast-Moving Items

Monthly ordering on A-tier items means holding a full month of buffer on your highest-velocity products. Moving to bi-weekly or weekly reorders reduces average on-hand inventory — improving the denominator in your ratio without touching COGS.

4. Clear Slow-Moving Inventory Actively

Items sitting 90+ days don't fix themselves. Quarterly reviews with clear action options — bundling, time-limited promotions, supplier returns, or liquidation — prevent slow movers from becoming write-offs.

5. Renegotiate Supplier Minimum Order Quantities

5 Strategies to Improve Your Inventory TurnoverMOQ traps are common: suppliers often require minimums that exceed monthly usage by 3–6x, structurally reducing turnover. Smaller, more frequent orders — even at slightly higher unit cost — often produce better economics once carrying cost and obsolescence risk are factored in.

When Spreadsheets Stop Working for Inventory Tracking

When Spreadsheets Stop Working for Inventory TrackingEvery strategy above depends on reliable, current inventory data. Spreadsheets don't provide it. Manual entry creates lag, there's no automated reorder signal, and ABC segmentation has to be rebuilt from scratch each time. If purchasing, warehouse, and sales teams are working from different files, you're reconciling inventory — not managing it.

These resources cover the next layer:

  • What is inventory management? — Core concepts and system types

  • Inventory management best practices — Operational frameworks that scale

  • How to choose inventory management software — Evaluation criteria for SMBs

  • Safety stock calculation guide — Formula, variables, and worked examples

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