Calculate the full total cost of ownership including purchase price, freight, customs, quality costs, and admin. Make informed sourcing decisions.
Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) goes beyond the purchase price to capture every expense associated with acquiring, receiving, using, and supporting a product or material. TCO includes the purchase price, freight and logistics, customs duties and tariffs, quality and inspection costs, administrative and ordering expenses, inventory carrying cost, and any warranty or defect-related costs.
Many procurement decisions focus too narrowly on unit price, leading companies to choose the cheapest supplier only to discover hidden costs in quality failures, delivery delays, and administrative burden. A supplier quoting 10% less on unit price may actually cost 15% more when all TCO components are included.
This calculator helps you build a comprehensive TCO analysis by itemizing all cost components, making it easy to compare suppliers on a true total-cost basis rather than just quoted price.
Tracking this metric consistently enables manufacturing teams to identify performance trends early and take corrective action before minor inefficiencies escalate into significant production losses.
Price-only sourcing decisions are the most common and costly mistake in procurement. TCO analysis reveals the true cost of each supply option, enabling better supplier selection, negotiation leverage, and long-term cost reduction strategies. Data-driven tracking enables proactive decision-making rather than reactive problem-solving, ultimately saving time, materials, and labor costs in production operations.
TCO = Purchase Price + Freight + Customs/Duties + Quality Cost + Admin Cost + Carrying Cost TCO per Unit = Total of all cost components per unit TCO Premium % = ((TCO − Purchase Price) / Purchase Price) × 100
Result: TCO = $12.80 per unit
$10.00 + $1.50 + $0.80 + $0.30 + $0.20 = $12.80 per unit. The TCO is 28% higher than the purchase price alone. A domestic supplier at $11.50 unit price with $0.50 freight and no customs may have a lower TCO of $12.20.
Direct costs include purchase price, freight, customs duties, insurance, and packaging. Indirect costs include receiving and inspection labor, quality testing, supplier management time, IT integration costs, and payment processing. Strategic costs include safety stock carrying cost driven by lead time and variability, risk mitigation costs, and the cost of managing the supplier relationship.
International sourcing often looks attractive on unit price but can lose its advantage when factoring in ocean freight ($2,000-$5,000 per container), customs duties (0-25%), inspection trips, longer lead times (40-90 days vs 5-15 days), higher safety stock, and currency risk. A thorough TCO comparison often shows domestic sourcing is competitive within 5-10% for many product categories.
Moving from price-based to TCO-based sourcing requires executive sponsorship, cross-functional data sharing (finance, quality, logistics, production), and new supplier scorecards that weight total cost alongside unit price. Organizations that adopt TCO consistently report 8-15% total supply chain cost reductions within two years.
TCO is the complete cost of acquiring and using a product over its lifecycle. It includes direct costs (price, freight, duties) and indirect costs (quality, admin, inventory carrying, risk). TCO provides a more accurate comparison than purchase price alone.
For domestic supply, hidden costs typically add 5-15% above purchase price. For international supply, especially from low-cost countries, hidden costs can add 20-40% when accounting for freight, duties, quality, lead time, and risk.
Divide the total shipment cost by the number of units in the shipment. Include ocean/air freight, inland transportation, port charges, and any last-mile delivery fees. For LTL shipments, use the actual freight bill divided by units shipped.
Yes, for critical items. Assign a probability and cost to supply disruption events (natural disaster, quality failure, political instability). Risk Cost = Probability × Impact × Recovery Time Cost. This is especially important for single-source items.
Landed cost typically covers only the costs to get the product to your dock: price + freight + duties + insurance. TCO goes further to include quality, admin, inventory carrying, and any post-delivery costs.
Many ERP systems have TCO modules. Dedicated spend analytics platforms like Coupa, GEP, and Jaggaer offer TCO modeling. Spreadsheet-based models work well for smaller organizations with fewer suppliers.