Accounting Of Inventory Stock

Accounting Of Inventory Stock is categorized as a Current Asset in ERPNext’s Chart of Accounts. Inventory movements must be appropriately accounted for in order to guarantee that financial data is accurately reflected in reports such as the Balance Sheet and Profit and Loss Statement.

 

ERPNext offers two primary inventory accounting methods:

1. Perpetual Inventory (ERPNext’s default and suggested)

Every stock transaction is automatically entered into the General Ledger (GL) using the Perpetual Inventory method. This comprises:

 

 

Your general ledger and stock ledger will always be in perfect sync thanks to this system.

1.1 Transaction Flow:

Purchase receipts are issued when goods are received.

 

Dr. Stock-in-Hand (Asset) Cr. Stock Received But Not Billed

 

When a purchase invoice is issued for an item:

 

Dr. Stock Received But Not Billed Cr. Creditors (Accounts Payable)

 

Following the sale and delivery of goods (Delivery Note or Sales Invoice with “Update Stock”):

 

Cr. Stock-in-Hand (Asset) Dr. Cost of Goods Sold (COGS)

 

During manufacturing (via Stock Entry):

 

System deducts raw materials and adds finished goods based on valuation rate.

 

Returns:

 

Automatic posting of reverse accounting entries occurs.

1.2 Key Benefits of Perpetual Inventory:

 

Important: This approach is dependent on the rate at which items are valued. When completing inward transactions (such as production, material receipts, or purchase receipts), always enter an accurate valuation.

2. Periodic Inventory (Less Often Used Manual Adjustment Method)

ERPNext does not automatically generate accounting entries for stock transactions when using this method. Rather, at the conclusion of the accounting period, inventory values are manually adjusted.

2.1 How It Works:

2.2 When to Use Periodic Inventory:

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