📊 Business guide

How to Calculate Average Inventory

Average inventory is the foundation of several critical business metrics — inventory turnover, days sales of inventory, and COGS analysis all depend on getting this number right. This guide covers the standard formula, step-by-step worked examples, the multi-period method, and the most common mistakes businesses make.

Last updated: March 24, 2026

What is average inventory?

Average inventory is the mean value of a company's stock over a given period — typically a month, quarter, or year. Rather than using a single point-in-time snapshot, it smooths out fluctuations caused by seasonality, restocking cycles, and irregular demand patterns.

Businesses use average inventory as an input for other important calculations: inventory turnover ratio, days inventory outstanding (DIO), and the cost of goods sold. A single end-of-period inventory balance can be misleading — a business might deliberately run inventory down before a reporting date, making efficiency look better than it actually is. Average inventory corrects for this.

Average inventory formula

The standard two-point formula uses the beginning and ending inventory balances for a period:

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

This works well for short, stable periods. For businesses with seasonal swings or irregular restocking, a multi-period average gives a more accurate picture.

Multi-period formula

Average Inventory = Sum of all period-end balances ÷ Number of periods

For example, averaging 13 monthly snapshots (January through January) gives a full-year rolling average that accounts for every peak and trough in the cycle.

How to calculate average inventory step by step

Two-point method (most common)

  1. Find your beginning inventory — the stock value at the start of the period. This is usually the ending inventory from the prior period.
  2. Find your ending inventory — the stock value at the close of the period, from your balance sheet or stock count.
  3. Add the two values together.
  4. Divide by 2.

Multi-period method

  1. Collect inventory balances at the end of each period (month, quarter, etc.).
  2. Include the opening balance of the first period as your first data point.
  3. Add all balances together.
  4. Divide by the total number of data points used.

Worked examples

Example 1 — Two-point annual average

A retailer starts the year with $120,000 in inventory and ends the year with $80,000:

Average Inventory = ($120,000 + $80,000) ÷ 2
= $200,000 ÷ 2 = $100,000

The average inventory for the year is $100,000 — a more realistic view than using either the high ($120,000) or the low ($80,000) figure alone.

Example 2 — Monthly average (seasonal business)

A garden supply company with strong spring seasonality tracks monthly closing balances:

Jan: $40K · Feb: $55K · Mar: $90K · Apr: $110K · May: $95K · Jun: $70K
Jul: $50K · Aug: $45K · Sep: $40K · Oct: $35K · Nov: $30K · Dec: $35K
Sum = $695,000 ÷ 12 months = $57,917 average inventory

Note how the simple two-point method (Jan $40K + Dec $35K ÷ 2 = $37,500) would significantly understate the actual average, because it misses the spring peak entirely. Multi-period is the right approach for seasonal businesses.

Example 3 — Quarterly average

A wholesale distributor reporting quarterly:

Q1 start: $200K · Q1 end: $180K · Q2 end: $210K · Q3 end: $195K · Q4 end: $170K
Sum = $955,000 ÷ 5 data points = $191,000

How average inventory is used

Average inventory feeds directly into several key business metrics:

Metric Formula using average inventory What it tells you
Inventory Turnover COGS ÷ Average Inventory How many times stock is sold and replaced per period
Days Inventory Outstanding 365 ÷ Inventory Turnover How many days stock sits before being sold
Inventory to Sales ratio Average Inventory ÷ Net Sales How much inventory is held relative to revenue
Working Capital analysis Part of current assets How much capital is tied up in stock

Inventory turnover example

Using the retailer from Example 1:

Annual COGS = $600,000 · Average Inventory = $100,000
Inventory Turnover = $600,000 ÷ $100,000 = 6.0×
Days Inventory Outstanding = 365 ÷ 6.0 = 61 days

This means the business sells through its entire stock about every 61 days — a reasonable figure for a mid-range retailer. Industry benchmarks vary widely, so always compare against peers in the same sector.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Using year-end only: Businesses sometimes manipulate year-end inventory by running down stock before the reporting date. Using only the end-of-year balance rewards this behavior in the metrics. Multi-period averaging reduces this distortion.
  • Mixing valuation methods: Beginning and ending inventory must use the same valuation method (FIFO, LIFO, or weighted average). Mixing methods produces a meaningless average.
  • Ignoring work-in-progress: For manufacturers, average inventory should include raw materials, work-in-progress (WIP), and finished goods — not just finished goods alone.
  • Using retail value instead of cost: Inventory turnover uses COGS (at cost) in the numerator. Average inventory must also be valued at cost for the ratio to be meaningful.
  • Averaging too few data points for seasonal businesses: A two-point annual average for a seasonal business will almost always be wrong. Monthly snapshots give a far more accurate picture of true average stock levels.

How to interpret your average inventory result

Average inventory on its own is a dollar figure — it only becomes useful in context. Here is how to interpret what you find:

Rising average inventory — could mean demand is falling, purchasing is too aggressive, or a deliberate strategic build. Not inherently bad, but worth investigating.
Falling average inventory — could mean demand is strong, purchasing has improved, or stockout risk is increasing. Check service levels alongside.
High inventory turnover (low average relative to COGS) — efficient, but may signal understocking and lost sales if service levels suffer.
Low inventory turnover (high average relative to COGS) — capital is tied up in slow-moving stock. Risk of obsolescence and carrying cost waste.

Frequently asked questions

What is average inventory used for?

Average inventory is used to calculate inventory turnover ratio, days inventory outstanding, and inventory-to-sales ratio. It smooths out period-end fluctuations to give a more accurate view of how much stock a business typically holds.

What is the difference between beginning and ending inventory?

Beginning inventory is the stock value at the start of a period — it equals the ending inventory from the prior period. Ending inventory is the value at the close of the current period, after sales and new purchases have been accounted for.

Should I use the two-point or multi-period method?

Use the two-point method (beginning + ending ÷ 2) when your business has stable, predictable inventory levels throughout the year. Use multi-period averaging (monthly or quarterly snapshots) when you have seasonal demand, large restocking events, or significant month-to-month variation.

Can average inventory be calculated in units instead of dollars?

Yes — the formula works identically with unit counts. Simply replace dollar values with unit quantities. Unit-based averages are useful for planning reorder points and safety stock, while dollar-based averages are used for financial reporting and ratios.

What is a good inventory turnover ratio?

It depends heavily on industry. Grocery and fast-moving consumer goods can turn inventory 12–30 times per year. Furniture or automotive parts might turn 3–6 times. Always compare your turnover against industry benchmarks, not a universal standard. A higher ratio means faster-moving stock, but too high can signal understocking.