📊 Business guide

How to Calculate Phantom Profit

Phantom profit is the illusory income reported under FIFO inventory accounting when prices are rising — profit that appears on the income statement but does not represent real economic gain because the cost of replacing inventory has increased. This guide covers the formula, the FIFO vs LIFO mechanics that create it, four worked examples, and why it matters for decision-making and tax planning.

Last updated: March 24, 2026

What is phantom profit?

Phantom profit (also called illusory profit or inventory profit) is the portion of reported net income that arises purely from inflation — specifically from using an inventory cost flow method (FIFO) that matches older, lower-cost inventory against current, higher selling prices during periods of rising costs.

The profit is "phantom" because while it shows up on the income statement and is taxable, it does not represent real economic enrichment. To keep the business running at the same scale, the company must replace the inventory it sold at the new, higher prices — consuming the cash that the phantom profit appeared to generate.

Phantom profit is a FIFO-specific phenomenon. It occurs when:

  • A company uses FIFO (First-In, First-Out) inventory costing
  • Inventory costs are rising over time (inflation)
  • The company matches old, low-cost inventory against current selling prices

Under LIFO (Last-In, First-Out), the most recent (highest) costs are matched against revenue, eliminating most or all phantom profit — but producing lower reported income.

⚠️ FIFO — Phantom Profit Risk

Oldest (lowest) costs flow into COGS first.

During inflation: low COGS → high gross profit → some profit is phantom.

Inventory on balance sheet reflects newer, higher costs — appears healthy.

✅ LIFO — Eliminates Phantom Profit

Newest (highest) costs flow into COGS first.

During inflation: high COGS → lower gross profit → no phantom profit.

Inventory on balance sheet reflects older, lower costs — understates reality.

Phantom profit formula

Core formula

Phantom Profit = FIFO Net Income − LIFO Net Income

This is the cleanest definition — the difference in reported profit between the two methods under identical facts. If FIFO reports $180,000 net income and LIFO reports $120,000, phantom profit is $60,000.

Alternative formula — from COGS difference

Phantom Profit = (LIFO COGS − FIFO COGS) × (1 − Tax rate)
Or before tax:
Pre-tax phantom profit = LIFO COGS − FIFO COGS

This works because FIFO COGS is lower than LIFO COGS during inflation — that difference in COGS flows directly to the difference in gross profit and ultimately net income. Multiplying by (1 − tax rate) gives the after-tax phantom profit.

Real profit vs phantom profit

FIFO Net Income = Real Profit + Phantom Profit
Real (economic) profit = FIFO Net Income − Phantom Profit
Real (economic) profit ≈ LIFO Net Income

LIFO net income is the better approximation of true economic profit during inflationary periods because it matches current costs against current revenues.

How to calculate phantom profit step by step

  1. Identify the inventory layers and their costs. List the units purchased in each period with their per-unit cost. Older purchases have lower costs; newer purchases have higher costs during inflation.
  2. Calculate FIFO COGS. Under FIFO, assign the oldest costs first to units sold. Multiply each layer's units sold by that layer's cost.
  3. Calculate LIFO COGS. Under LIFO, assign the newest costs first to units sold. Multiply each layer's units sold by that layer's cost.
  4. Find the COGS difference. LIFO COGS − FIFO COGS = the pre-tax difference. During inflation this is always positive (LIFO COGS is higher).
  5. Calculate pre-tax phantom profit. The COGS difference equals the pre-tax phantom profit — because the only thing that changed between the two calculations is COGS, which flows directly to gross profit.
  6. Adjust for taxes (optional). After-tax phantom profit = pre-tax phantom profit × (1 − tax rate).

Worked examples

Example 1 — Basic two-layer inventory

A company has the following inventory layers and sells 300 units:

Purchase Units Cost/unit Total cost
January (older) 200 $10.00 $2,000
March (newer) 200 $14.00 $2,800
Total available 400 $4,800

Sales: 300 units × $20.00 = $6,000 revenue. Now compare FIFO vs LIFO:

FIFO LIFO
COGS (300 units) 200 × $10 + 100 × $14 = $3,400 200 × $14 + 100 × $10 = $3,800
Gross profit $6,000 − $3,400 = $2,600 $6,000 − $3,800 = $2,200
Phantom profit (pre-tax) $2,600 − $2,200 = $400
Real economic profit LIFO result = $2,200

FIFO gross profit breakdown:

Real profit $2,200
Phantom $400
Real (LIFO) = $2,200 Phantom = $400 FIFO total = $2,600

Example 2 — With tax effect

Using the same facts, assuming a 25% corporate tax rate:

Pre-tax phantom profit = $400
Tax on phantom profit = $400 × 25% = $100
After-tax phantom profit = $400 × (1 − 0.25) = $300
The company pays $100 more in taxes than it would under LIFO —
on income that is not economically real.

Example 3 — Three purchase layers

A retailer makes three purchases during the year and sells 500 units at $30 each:

Batch Units Cost/unit
Q1 (oldest)200$15.00
Q2200$18.00
Q3 (newest)200$21.00
FIFO COGS (200 × $15) + (200 × $18) + (100 × $21) = $3,000 + $3,600 + $2,100 = $8,700
LIFO COGS (200 × $21) + (200 × $18) + (100 × $15) = $4,200 + $3,600 + $1,500 = $9,300
Revenue = 500 × $30 = $15,000
FIFO gross profit = $15,000 − $8,700 = $6,300
LIFO gross profit = $15,000 − $9,300 = $5,700
Phantom profit = $6,300 − $5,700 = $600

Example 4 — No phantom profit (stable prices)

If all inventory is purchased at the same cost ($15/unit), FIFO COGS and LIFO COGS are identical — phantom profit is zero. This confirms that phantom profit is exclusively an inflation-driven phenomenon. When prices are stable or falling, FIFO does not create phantom profit.

Why phantom profit matters

Tax consequences

Phantom profit is fully taxable. A company using FIFO in an inflationary environment pays income taxes on phantom profit — real cash leaving the business for income that was not economically earned. Over several years of sustained inflation, this can meaningfully erode a company's cash position.

This is one of the primary reasons US tax law historically permitted LIFO — allowing companies to defer taxes by matching current costs against current revenues. Note that LIFO is permitted under US GAAP but prohibited under IFRS.

Decision-making distortion

Managers and investors reading FIFO financial statements during inflation may overestimate true profitability. A business that appears profitable under FIFO may actually be consuming its capital base just to maintain inventory levels at the same physical quantity.

Dividend and distribution risk

If a board pays dividends based on FIFO reported income without adjusting for phantom profit, they risk distributing capital rather than true earnings — gradually depleting the equity base needed to sustain operations.

Situation FIFO impact Adjustment needed
Tax planning Higher taxable income from phantom profit Consider LIFO election to reduce tax burden
Profit sharing / bonuses Employees may receive bonuses on phantom earnings Adjust bonus base to LIFO-equivalent income
Loan covenants Inflated income may mask real cash flow weakness Lenders should require LIFO reserve disclosure
Dividend decisions Risk of paying out phantom earnings as dividends Subtract phantom profit before setting payout
Investment analysis FIFO earnings overstate true return on capital Add LIFO reserve change back to COGS for comparisons

The LIFO reserve connection

Companies that use LIFO for tax purposes but FIFO for financial reporting (or vice versa) disclose a LIFO reserve — the cumulative difference between FIFO and LIFO inventory values on the balance sheet.

LIFO Reserve = FIFO Inventory value − LIFO Inventory value
Change in LIFO reserve = Current year LIFO reserve − Prior year LIFO reserve
A positive change in LIFO reserve = phantom profit created this period

Analysts use the LIFO reserve to convert FIFO statements to a LIFO basis for cross-company comparison:

LIFO COGS = FIFO COGS + Change in LIFO reserve
LIFO Inventory = FIFO Inventory − LIFO reserve

This adjustment is standard practice in financial analysis when comparing companies that use different inventory methods — which is common in industries like oil and gas, manufacturing, and retail.

FIFO vs LIFO — full comparison during inflation

Metric FIFO (during inflation) LIFO (during inflation)
COGS Lower (older, cheaper costs) Higher (newer, more expensive costs)
Gross profit Higher (includes phantom profit) Lower (closer to economic reality)
Net income Higher (overstated) Lower (more accurate)
Tax liability Higher (taxes on phantom profit) Lower (LIFO tax shield)
Inventory on balance sheet Higher (recent costs) Lower (old costs — LIFO layers)
Cash flow Lower (higher taxes paid) Higher (lower taxes, more cash retained)
Permitted under IFRS ✅ Yes ❌ No
Permitted under US GAAP ✅ Yes ✅ Yes

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Assuming phantom profit applies in all environments. Phantom profit only arises during inflation when costs are rising. During deflation, FIFO produces lower profit than LIFO — the "phantom" effect reverses direction.
  • Confusing phantom profit with accounting fraud. Phantom profit is a legitimate result of applying GAAP-compliant FIFO accounting during inflation. It is not manipulation — but it does require careful interpretation by analysts and managers.
  • Using phantom profit figures to set operational targets. Budgets, bonuses, and dividend policies should be based on economic profit (LIFO-equivalent), not inflated FIFO figures that include phantom profit.
  • Ignoring the tax cash flow impact. The phantom profit tax bill is a real cash outflow. Financial models that treat FIFO income as fully available cash are overstating cash generation in inflationary periods.
  • Forgetting IFRS restrictions. Companies reporting under IFRS cannot use LIFO — meaning international companies always face phantom profit risk under FIFO and must disclose it transparently in notes to financial statements.

Frequently asked questions

What is phantom profit in accounting?

Phantom profit is the portion of reported net income under FIFO inventory accounting that exists only because older, lower-cost inventory is matched against current selling prices during inflation. It appears real on the income statement and is taxable, but it does not represent genuine economic enrichment because replacing the sold inventory costs more than what was expensed as COGS.

How do you calculate phantom profit?

Phantom Profit = FIFO Net Income − LIFO Net Income. Equivalently, pre-tax phantom profit = LIFO COGS − FIFO COGS. After-tax phantom profit = (LIFO COGS − FIFO COGS) × (1 − tax rate). The difference arises because FIFO assigns lower, older costs to COGS, leaving more reported profit — some of which is phantom.

Does phantom profit occur under LIFO?

No. Phantom profit is exclusively a FIFO phenomenon during inflation. Under LIFO, the most recent (highest) costs are matched against revenue first, eliminating the cost-price mismatch that creates phantom profit. This is one of the main economic arguments for using LIFO in inflationary periods.

Is phantom profit taxable?

Yes — phantom profit is fully taxable under both FIFO and LIFO methods. This is one of the most significant practical consequences: companies using FIFO in inflationary environments pay real taxes on income that is not economically real, consuming cash that must then be used to replace inventory at higher prices.

What is the LIFO reserve and how does it relate to phantom profit?

The LIFO reserve is the cumulative difference between FIFO and LIFO inventory values on the balance sheet. The annual change in the LIFO reserve equals the pre-tax phantom profit for that period. Analysts use the LIFO reserve to convert FIFO-based financial statements to a LIFO basis for more accurate comparison.

Can IFRS companies avoid phantom profit?

IFRS prohibits LIFO, so companies reporting under IFRS must use FIFO or weighted average cost — both of which can produce phantom profit during inflation. IFRS companies manage this through disclosure in financial statement notes and through management's discussion of the inflation impact on reported results.