In that case there is not Sales Revenue and not COGS, it is all Service Revenue and Business Expense. When you are doing you other services you mentioned (pruning or tree removal) you are not selling anything. The other items you mention unless they are sold with the trees are NOT COGS they are business expenses.Īlso any COGS would only apply when you are SELLING the trees. However if you are not selling the dirt and it is an expense for the installation of the trees then it would be an expense of doing business. Then your Sales Revenue on this item would be $9 and the COGS would be $6. If you have dirt in inventory at $2 per cu ft and a tree took 3 cu ft and if you had a line item on the invoice of 3 cu ft of dirt at $3 per cu ft. But you can only have a COGS for the dirt volume you actually sold them. If you are also have a line item for the dirt, then I think the dirt too could be considered COGS. Then your cost of the trees you sell this customer would be COGS for the trees you sell. When you buy the trees and dirt to plant the trees, are you selling them the trees? I assume so. It's a good idea to check with your CPA to confirm you are recording the purchase of inventory properly. There is an exception for Small Business Taxpayers, but that exception is not universally agreed upon in terms of whether you can treat your inventory as non-incidental material and supplies, thereby deducting the cost of inventory when purchased. This is why the IRS requires businesses where inventory is an income-producing factor, to use accrual basis accounting. It's when you buy them in one tax year and sell them in a subsequent tax year that there's a mismatch between income and expenses and why accrual accounting is required. If, however, you purchased the TVs in January and sold them all to your customers in the same year, your net income would be the same regardless if you record the purchase as job supplies or the items are put into inventory and expensed to COGS when sold. If you had properly recorded it as inventory, you would not get the deduction in 2022, you would get it as COGS when you sell the TVs to your customers in the future. Therefore, depending on your business structure and taxable income, recording the purchase as job supplies, instead of inventory, may save you up to $18,500 in federal income tax in 2022. If you record that purchase as job supplies, you will be deducting $50K from your income in 2022, but the income from those TVs won't happen until a future tax year. Think of it this way, let's say your company found a great deal on TVs this week and decided to buy $50K worth. It's what's known in accounting as the matching principle - matching your business expenses to the same period as the income those expenses produce. The reason for this is that items purchased for resale are not an expense to your business until you sell them to your customer. The purchase should be recorded as inventory first, then to COGS when sold to your customer. You don't book the purchase of items for resale directly to COGS when purchased. If you re-sell a product, it should be put into inventory and not recorded as job supplies.
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