Economic Order Quantity (EOQ) Is A Decision Tool Used in Cost Accounting. It's A Formula That
Economic Order Quantity (EOQ) Is A Decision Tool Used in Cost Accounting. It's A Formula That
Demand, relevant ordering cost, and relevant carrying cost: Customer demand for the
product is known. Also, the ordering and carrying costs are certain. A relevant cost refers
to a cost you need to consider when you make a decision. The term is used throughout this
book.
Purchase order lead time: The lead time is the time period from placing the order to order
delivery. EOQ assumes that the lead time is known.
Purchasing cost per unit: The cost per unit doesn’t change with the amount ordered. This
removes any consideration of quantity discounts. Assume you’ll pay the same amount per
unit, regardless of the order size.
Stockouts: No stockouts occur. You maintain enough inventory to avoid a stock out cost.
That means you monitor your customer demand and inventory levels carefully.
Economic order quantity uses three variables: demand, relevant ordering cost, and relevant
carrying cost. Use them to set up an EOQ formula:
Demand: The demand, in units, for the product for a specific time period.
Note that the ordering cost is calculated per order. The carrying costs are calculated per unit. Here’s
the formula for economic order quantity:
Economic order quantity = square root of [(2 x demand x ordering costs) ÷ carrying costs]
Q is the economic order quantity (units). D is demand (units, often annual), S is ordering cost (per
purchase order), and H is carrying cost per unit.
Say your clothing shop also sells men’s hiking shoes. The model you sell costs $45 per pair. You
sell 100 pairs of hiking boots a month, or 1,200 per year.
Your ordering cost is $50 per order. You added up the total time spent by everyone who’s involved
in the ordering process, and you figure that the combined time to process each order is one hour.
Based on average salary and benefit costs, you assign a $50 cost per order.
The carrying cost per unit is $3. That rate covers the occupancy costs and insurance where the
inventory is stored. The amount also accounts for the opportunity cost of carrying the inventory.
Based on the data for the hiking boots, here’s your economic order quantity:
Economic order quantity = square root of [(2 x demand x ordering costs) ÷ carrying costs]
Economic order quantity = square root of [(2 x 1,200 x ($50)) ÷ $3]
Economic order quantity = square root of [$120,000 ÷ $3]
Economic order quantity = square root of 40,000
Economic order quantity = 200
You just determined that the ideal order level is 200 units. At that level, you minimize ordering
and carrying costs.