Calculate the true cost of consignment inventory including unit cost when sold, handling expenses, and carrying savings vs traditional purchasing.
Consignment inventory is a supply arrangement where the supplier retains ownership of inventory at the customer's location until the customer actually uses or sells it. The customer pays only upon consumption, not upon receipt. This shifts the carrying cost and obsolescence risk to the supplier, freeing the customer's working capital.
However, consignment is not free. The customer typically pays a premium unit price (5-15% above standard purchase price) to compensate the supplier for carrying the financial risk. The customer also bears handling costs for receiving, storing, and managing the consigned material. The net benefit depends on whether the carrying cost savings exceed the price premium and handling costs.
This calculator compares the total cost of consignment versus traditional purchasing, factoring in the unit price premium, handling costs, carrying cost elimination, and working capital benefit.
Integrating this calculation into regular operational reviews ensures that key decisions are grounded in current data rather than outdated assumptions or rough approximations from the past.
Consignment inventory can dramatically improve cash flow and reduce risk, but the economics must be validated. Some consignment arrangements actually cost more than traditional purchasing when price premiums and handling costs are included. This calculator reveals the true net benefit. Precise quantification supports benchmarking against industry standards and internal targets, driving accountability and continuous improvement throughout the organization.
Cost When Sold = Units Consumed × Consignment Price Premium Cost = (Consignment Price − Purchase Price) × Units Consumed Carrying Savings = Avg Stock Value × Carrying Rate (saved because supplier owns) Net Benefit = Carrying Savings − Premium Cost − Handling Cost
Result: $10,500 net savings from consignment
Price premium: ($11 − $10) × 50,000 = $50,000 additional cost. Carrying savings: 5,000 × $10 × 25% = $12,500 saved (but at consignment price: 5,000 × $11 × 25% = $13,750 — all borne by supplier). Net carrying avoided on purchase basis: 5,000 × $10 × 25% = $12,500. Working capital value and risk transfer make consignment attractive if the premium is modest.
Consignment is most valuable for: high-value components with long lead times (frees significant working capital), slow-moving items with obsolescence risk (transfers risk to supplier), items with uncertain demand (avoid over-purchasing), and strategic supplier partnerships where both parties benefit. It is less beneficial for low-value, high-turn items where carrying cost is minimal.
Key contract terms include: consignment stock min/max levels, payment trigger (upon consumption, withdrawal, or sale), pricing mechanism and premium, physical inventory reconciliation frequency, obsolescence and damage responsibility, insurance requirements, and termination provisions including stock return.
Track these metrics monthly: consignment stock value, consumption rate, stock turns, price premium paid, carrying cost avoided, working capital freed, and net benefit vs traditional purchase. Dashboard these for procurement leadership review.
Consignment inventory is material sitting at your location but still owned by the supplier. You pay for it only when you consume or sell it. The supplier bears the carrying cost and obsolescence risk until that point.
VMI (Vendor Managed Inventory) means the supplier manages replenishment decisions but you typically own the stock upon delivery. Consignment means the supplier owns the stock until you consume it. They can be combined but are distinct arrangements.
Suppliers benefit from guaranteed shelf space, increased sales velocity (no purchase order friction), better demand visibility, and stronger customer relationships. The price premium compensates for the carrying cost and risk they assume.
Premiums typically range from 3-15% above standard purchase price. The premium depends on the supplier's carrying cost, the inventory turnover at the customer, and competitive dynamics. High-turn items may carry lower premiums.
Consignment inventory does not appear on the customer's balance sheet until consumed. This improves inventory turnover ratios and reduces reported working capital. The supplier carries the inventory asset on their balance sheet.
Risks include supplier financial instability (supplier could reclaim stock if bankrupt), price increases during the consignment period, dependency on a single supplier, and the administrative burden of consumption tracking and reconciliation. Documenting the assumptions behind your calculation makes it easier to update the analysis when input conditions change in the future.