Manufacturing lives and dies on accurate cost data. In July 2025, U.S. manufacturers held about $952 billion in total inventories, a level that can swing margins if costs are recorded or valued poorly. In the same quarter, unit labor costs in manufacturingrose 2.0%, reminding finance teams that small changes on the shop floor quickly show up in the income statement.
Clear methods for costing, valuing inventory, and reconciling COGM and COGS turn this moving picture into decisions you can trust. If your footprint spans the U.S. and India, consistent policies and shared definitions matter even more, since different standards and currencies come into play.
In this blog, we’ll explore accounting for manufacturers in detail, what it involves, the key cost components, and how to calculate critical metrics like the cost of goods manufactured (COGM) and cost of goods sold (COGS).
Key Takeaways
Manufacturing accounting ties every cost on the shop floor to the company’s financial results, helping leaders see the true cost of production.
Accurate identification of direct materials, labour, and overheads improves inventory valuation and pricing decisions.
Choosing consistent costing methods like FIFO or weighted average ensures reliable reporting across regions and standards.
Regular calculation of COGM and COGS keeps profit margins visible and supports smarter production planning.
When handled systematically, manufacturing accounting turns cost data into a strategic tool for growth and efficiency.
What is Manufacturing Accounting?
Manufacturing accounting is a specialised branch of cost and managerial accounting that deals with all costs incurred in producing physical goods. It tracks direct materials, direct labour and manufacturing overhead, allocates these costs to units produced, and helps value ending inventory and COGS.
Unlike general financial accounting, manufacturing accounting focuses tightly on the production process and supports internal decision-making, though many of its outputs also affect external financial statements and regulatory disclosures.
Once you understand what manufacturing accounting covers, the next step is to look at the different accounting types that work together to keep a factory’s finances accurate and transparent.
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What Type of Accounting is Used in Manufacturing?
Manufacturing uses a blend of accounting disciplines that work together from the shop floor to the financial statements. Each one answers a different question: what did it cost to make, how should we value inventory, and what should leaders change next to improve margins.
Financial accounting
This comes first for external reporting. U.S. manufacturers follow US GAAP, while Indian entities follow Ind AS, which is based on IFRS.
Under both, inventory is carried at cost and later tested against net realisable value. US GAAP permits methods like FIFO, weighted-average, and LIFO. IFRS and Ind AS prohibit LIFO, so cross-border groups must pick methods carefully when working from the US to India.
Inventory accounting
This type turns production activity into numbers for the balance sheet and cost of goods sold. Companies commonly use FIFO or weighted-average cost. IFRS and Ind AS require the lower of cost and net realisable value model.
US GAAP uses a similar model but applies a different “market” test when LIFO or retail methods are used. These rules affect margins and tax, so consistency across U.S. and Indian books matters.
Cost accounting
Cost Accounting is the engine room. It captures direct materials, direct labour, and manufacturing overhead, and assigns them to units produced. Manufacturers choose methods based on how they make things. Job costing fits custom orders and short runs. Process costing fits continuous, homogeneous output.
Many plants also use standard costing with variance analysis to spot gaps between target and actual results. Activity-based costing helps spread overheads using real cost drivers rather than broad averages.
Absorption costing
This costing is required for external financial statements. It puts all manufacturing costs into inventory, including fixed factory overhead. That keeps reporting comparable and ties cost to revenue when goods are sold. Managers often review variable costing internally to see contribution margins and short-run decisions more clearly, but they still publish absorption-based results.
Managerial accounting
Managerial pulls the above into plans and decisions. Teams use cost and inventory data to set prices, budget materials and labour, monitor capacity, and evaluate product line profitability.
When a company operates from the US to India, managerial reports also reconcile method differences across GAAP, IFRS, and Ind AS so leaders see one version of the truth for unit cost, margins, and cash tied up in stock.
Put together, these disciplines give manufacturers a full view of performance. Financial accounting keeps you compliant. Inventory and absorption rules keep statements consistent. Cost and managerial tools help you reduce waste, set prices with confidence, and plan production with fewer surprises.
VJM Global brings expertise in U.S. GAAP, IFRS, and Ind AS, helping cross-border manufacturers maintain consistency in cost reporting and financial compliance across both jurisdictions.
Each of these accounting types plays a role in measuring production performance. But before we can calculate profits or value inventory, we need to understand the building blocks: the main cost components that make up total manufacturing expense.
Types of Manufacturing Costs
Manufacturing relies on a mix of accounting disciplines that work together to turn shop-floor activity into clear financial insight. Here are the core types and how they fit:
Direct materials: These are the raw inputs that form part of the finished product. For example, steel in automotive parts or fabric in garments. Tracking direct materials accurately helps manufacturers control purchase costs, monitor wastage, and calculate the actual material cost per unit.
Direct labour: This includes wages, benefits, and overtime paid to employees who are directly involved in converting materials into products. Recording labour costs precisely allows you to understand how much of your total production cost is driven by human effort and helps in analysing productivity levels.
Manufacturing overhead: Overhead represents the indirect costs required to run a factory, equipment depreciation, plant maintenance, factory utilities, and quality control. Though not traceable to a single unit, these costs must be allocated fairly to reflect the true cost of manufacturing.
These three together are often called product costs because they are capitalised into inventory and later flow into COGS when you sell the goods. Selling and administrative costs sit outside manufacturing and are treated as period costs, expensed in the period incurred. Keeping the line clear between product and period costs is a basic control that protects reported profit.
You will also hear two helpful summaries:
Prime cost = direct materials + direct labor. This highlights the core inputs that are easy to trace to a product.
Conversion cost = direct labor + manufacturing overhead. This shows what it takes to turn materials into finished items. These views help managers study labor intensity, automation choices, and process design.
Costs behave differently as output rises or falls, so it helps to group them by behavior:
Variable costs change with activity, such as material usage or piece-rate labor.
Fixed costs stay the same in total over a relevant range, like plant rent or salaried supervisors.
Mixed costs include both elements, for example a utility bill with a fixed service charge plus a usage component. Understanding cost behavior supports pricing, budgeting, and “what-if” capacity planning.
Work-in-progress (WIP): WIP refers to partially completed goods still on the production floor. Assigning value to WIP requires allocating a proportion of materials, labour, and overhead to each stage of production. It ensures that financial statements reflect the correct inventory and profitability for the period.
Finished goods: Once production is complete, finished goods move into inventory and are valued at total manufacturing cost. Accurate valuation is crucial for calculating the cost of goods sold (COGS) and setting appropriate pricing strategies.
Finally, tie costs to where goods sit in the flow. Raw materials await use, work in progress (WIP) holds partially completed items carrying materials, labor, and overhead, and finished goods are sale-ready. Accurate moves between these stages keep your balance sheet clean and your COGS trustworthy.
If your operations run from the US to India, align definitions and valuation rules on both sides so reports match and decisions stay consistent.
When these costs are identified and grouped correctly, manufacturers can translate them into measurable outputs. The next logical step is to see how these costs flow through the production process, from raw material to finished goods, by calculating the cost of goods manufactured and the cost of goods sold.
Calculating Cost of Goods Manufactured (COGM) and Cost of Goods Sold (COGS)
For manufacturers, understanding two key figures, Cost of Goods Manufactured (COGM) and Cost of Goods Sold (COGS), is vital. These numbers tie what happens on the production floor into your financial statements, and they are particularly important if your operations span geographical locations from the US to India.
Cost of Goods Manufactured (COGM)
COGM captures the total cost incurred to produce finished goods during a period, regardless of whether those goods have been sold yet. It bundles up direct materials, direct labour and manufacturing overhead, adds beginning work-in-progress (WIP) inventory, and subtracts ending WIP inventory.
Where Total Manufacturing Costs = Direct Materials + Direct Labour + Manufacturing Overhead.
Why it matters:
It shows how much cost was poured into finished goods in a period.
It helps value ending inventory and starting inventory for future periods.
For a company operating from the US to India, it ensures both cost tracking in India and U.S. reporting lines up.
Example: If your U.S. headquarters needs consistent reporting with an Indian production unit, agreeing on the WIP thresholds, overhead allocations, and currency translation is critical.
Cost of Goods Sold (COGS)
COGS reflects the cost of finished goods that were sold during the period. It connects manufacturing cost to revenue and appears directly on the income statement.
This aligns with a broader view of inventory flow: beginning inventory plus what was manufactured (COGM) gives goods available for sale; subtract ending inventory and you get what was actually sold.
It ensures your pricing, margins and cost controls reflect actual production and sales.
When operations are from the US to India, mismatches in how inventory is valued in India vs. in U.S. books can distort COGS and gross margin.
Practical Steps for Calculation
To compute these effectively, you’ll need:
Accurate beginning and ending inventory values for raw materials, WIP and finished goods. Mistakes here propagate into both COGM and COGS.
Clear allocation of direct and indirect manufacturing costs, especially overhead, machinery depreciation, factory utilities, indirect labour, maintenance. Without correct overhead, COGM misstates actual cost.
Consistent costing methods across periods and geographies. If your Indian unit uses FIFO for inventory and the U.S. unit uses LIFO (where allowed), you’ll get inconsistent cost basis.
Compare your computed COGM and COGS to actual outputs, sales and inventory movements. For off-shore accounting support (such as outsourcing cost accounting from the US to India), the offshore team must align with your U.S. reporting chart of accounts and cost definitions.
For WIP valuation, overhead allocation base, standard cost variances. This supports audit readiness and avoids surprises during cross-border reviews.
Common Pitfalls to Watch For
Ending WIP or finished goods inventory not updated timely, which can inflate or deflate COGM/COGS incorrectly.
Overhead cost pools that don’t reflect actual drivers (e.g., spreading overhead equally across all units when actual machine-hours differ widely).
Inconsistent inventory costing methods between jurisdictions (which matters especially for operations from the US to India).
Ignoring currency translation or regulatory differences in India for inventory or cost treatment, these can lead to misstated costs when consolidating U.S. headquarters’ books.
Knowing your COGM and COGS gives you a clear picture of profitability. But how you assign value to your inventory along the way can change those results significantly. That’s why the next section focuses on inventory costing methods and how to choose the right one for your business.
Costing Methods for Inventory
Inventory is the heartbeat of any manufacturing business. How you value it determines your cost of goods sold (COGS), gross profit, and ultimately, how healthy your balance sheet looks:
1. First-In, First-Out (FIFO)
FIFO assumes the oldest inventory items are sold first. The cost of older materials moves to COGS, while newer purchases remain in ending inventory. In times of rising material prices, FIFO shows lower COGS and higher profits because cheaper, earlier costs are matched against current sales. It’s widely accepted under both US GAAP and Ind AS/IFRS, making it a practical choice for manufacturers operating across both markets.
2. Last-In, First-Out (LIFO)
LIFO assumes the most recently purchased goods are sold first. It matches current costs with current revenue and can reduce taxable income when prices rise. However, LIFO is allowed under US GAAP but prohibited under IFRS and Ind AS, so multinational manufacturers from the US to India must maintain reconciliation between LIFO books in the US and FIFO or weighted-average books in India.
3. Weighted Average Cost (WAC)
The weighted-average method smooths price fluctuations by averaging total cost of goods available for sale over total units. Each unit in inventory carries the same average cost. It’s simple to maintain in automated systems and is accepted under both US GAAP and Ind AS/IFRS. Many Indian manufacturers prefer this method for its stability when raw-material prices change frequently.
4. Specific Identification
This method traces the exact cost of each unique item, making it suitable for high-value or custom-made goods, such as machinery or luxury components. It provides the most precise matching of cost and revenue but requires detailed tracking and is rarely used in high-volume manufacturing.
5. Standard Costing
Standard costing sets predetermined costs for materials, labour, and overhead, and records differences as variances. It’s often combined with other methods for internal control and performance monitoring. Variances, favourable or unfavourable, help managers evaluate efficiency and take corrective action.
6. Activity-Based Costing (ABC)
ABC allocates overheads using actual activities, machine hours, quality checks, or batch setups, rather than broad averages. It offers a clearer picture of true production cost, especially in complex or multi-product environments. For cross-border manufacturers from the US to India, ABC supports better transfer-pricing documentation by linking costs to specific operational drivers.
The best costing method depends on your production type, price volatility, and reporting obligations. A U.S. firm manufacturing in India might maintain FIFO or weighted-average in Indian books for Ind AS compliance, while keeping LIFO for U.S. tax purposes. Consistency and disclosure are key. When reporting consolidated results, adjustments ensure inventory valuation aligns with group policy.
At VJM Global, we advise manufacturers on selecting and applying the right inventory-costing method, whether FIFO, weighted average, or standard costing, to keep valuations consistent and transparent across entities.
Costing is only one part of the financial picture. To turn cost data into decisions, manufacturers need tools that link production, volume, and profitability, which brings us to cost-volume-profit (CVP) analysis and why it matters for strategic planning.
Cost-Volume-Profit (CVP) analysis
Cost-Volume-Profit (CVP) analysis is a simple but powerful way to understand how costs, sales volume, and profits relate to each other. It helps manufacturers answer one of the most practical questions in business: how many units do we need to sell to cover our costs, and how much profit will we earn beyond that point?
Key elements of CVP analysis
Fixed costs: These remain the same regardless of how much you produce, such as factory rent, insurance, or salaried staff.
Variable costs: These change directly with output, including raw materials, packaging, and direct labour.
Selling price per unit: The amount charged to customers for each finished product.
Contribution margin: The difference between selling price and variable cost per unit. This margin contributes to covering fixed costs and then to profit.
Break-even point (BEP): The production or sales level where total revenue equals total cost. At this point, profit is zero but losses are avoided.
The formula is straightforward:
Break-even point (in units) = Fixed Costs ÷ (Selling Price per Unit – Variable Cost per Unit)
Once you cross this point, each additional unit sold increases profit by the contribution margin.
Why CVP Analysis Matters for Manufacturers
Manufacturers often face trade-offs, whether to automate a process, outsource a component, or expand production capacity. CVP analysis highlights how each decision changes the cost mix. For instance, automating might increase fixed costs but lower variable costs per unit, shifting the break-even point. It also helps forecast the impact of currency changes or raw material fluctuations for firms operating from the US to India.
Managers use CVP models to:
Forecast profits under different production and sales scenarios.
Decide on pricing strategies and discount policies.
Plan for changes in material or labour costs.
Evaluate new market opportunities or product launches.
Measure plant efficiency between U.S. and Indian operations where cost structures differ.
While CVP analysis helps guide decisions, sound accounting practices keep the entire system reliable. Let’s close by reviewing best practices that strengthen manufacturing accounting and maintain consistency across operations in different regions.
Best Practices for Manufacturing Accounting
Strong manufacturing accounting starts with simple rules you follow every month. The goal is clear numbers you can trust for pricing, planning, and audits, especially if your operations run from the US to India.
Set and document your inventory policy.
Pick your cost formula and valuation rules, write them down, and apply them the same way every period. Under IFRS/Ind AS, inventories are measured at the lower of cost and net realisable value.
Under US GAAP, most inventories are measured at the lower of cost or market or, for many entities, the lower of cost and NRV under recent guidance. If your US books use LIFO while India uses FIFO or weighted average, build a reconciliation so group results stay consistent.
Define cost objects and overhead drivers before you post a single entry.
Decide what you are costing, a product, batch, line, or customer, and choose drivers that reflect real work, such as machine hours or setups.
Consider activity-based costing when overhead is material or products differ widely in how they consume resources. Document the model so plant, finance, and audit teams are using the same map.
Run a perpetual inventory with smart cycle counts.
Physical counts once a year are not enough for fast-moving plants. Use cycle counting to test small portions of stock frequently, reconcile differences, and fix root causes.
A perpetual system plus cycle counts improves record accuracy and supports reliable financial reporting. Government and industry guidance view cycle counting as a leading practice for control and efficiency.
Track the right KPIs and review them on a schedule.
Monitor inventory turns for raw materials, WIP, and finished goods. Use trends to spot slow-moving items, bottlenecks, or data issues. Turnover is a simple ratio, but it is one of the best signals for cash tied up in stock and for COGS accuracy.
Build controls that auditors recognize.
Limit who can add items, change costs, or post adjustments. Separate duties for purchasing, receiving, and recording. Map these controls to the COSO framework so you can show management and auditors how risks are addressed in day-to-day work.
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Keep audit-ready documentation, especially when you outsource.
Maintain bills of materials, routing standards, variance analyses, overhead pools, and count sheets with sign-offs. If a service provider handles accounting tasks, ask for relevant SOC assurance reports to gain comfort over their controls.
Close with a repeatable playbook.
Create a monthly checklist that moves cleanly from shop-floor data to the ledger: materials issues, labour capture, overhead application, WIP roll-forward, COGM and COGS calculations, then reconciliations to inventory subledgers.
If you operate from the US to India, include currency translation steps and a standing reconciliation for any GAAP vs Ind AS differences referenced in your policy.
Wrapping Up
Good manufacturing accounting does three things. It shows what each unit truly costs, it keeps inventory values credible, and it helps leaders choose where to improve. The methods you pick for costing and inventory, and the way you apply them month after month, will shape pricing, capacity plans, and gross margin. When plants, suppliers, or finance teams sit in different countries, the need for common rules and clean handoffs grows. That is how you avoid surprises at close and keep cash, cost, and output in balance.
If you want a partner that understands cost accounting on the factory floor and statutory reporting at consolidation, talk to VJM Global. Our team supports inventory valuation, COGM and COGS builds, audit-ready workpapers, and cross-border reporting, including projects from the US to India.
Contact us today to discuss your process and get a practical plan that fits your systems and deadlines!
FAQs
Q1. How often should manufacturing costs be reviewed or updated?
Most manufacturers review standard costs quarterly or semi-annually, but high-volume plants often recheck material and labour rates monthly to capture price and efficiency changes promptly.
Q2. How can technology improve manufacturing accounting accuracy?
Modern ERP s
ystems integrate production data, inventory tracking, and accounting modules, reducing manual errors and ensuring real-time cost visibility across departments.
Q3. What happens if overheads are allocated incorrectly?
Improper overhead allocation can distort product costs, misstate inventory values, and lead to pricing errors. Regular variance analysis and periodic recalibration of cost drivers help prevent this issue.
Q4. How does manufacturing accounting support decision-making?
It provides insights into cost behaviour, product profitability, and capacity use, information that helps managers decide on pricing, process improvements, and investment priorities.
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