Inventory Turnover Calculator
Divide COGS by average inventory to see how many times capital 'turns over' annually, quickly identifying overstock.
| Category | Healthy Turnover (Annual) | Target DSI | Your Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Consumer Electronics (3C) | ≥ 6× | ≤ 60 {}Days | ⚠️ Close to target |
| Home / Kitchen | ≥ 4× | ≤ 90 {}Days | ✅ Met (Target {4}×) |
| Apparel / Shoes | ≥ 4× | ≤ 90 {}Days | ✅ Met (Target {4}×) |
| Toys / Games | ≥ 4× | ≤ 90 {}Days | ✅ Met (Target {4}×) |
| Tools / Hardware | ≥ 3× | ≤ 120 {}Days | ✅ Met (Target {3}×) |
| Sports / Outdoors | ≥ 3× | ≤ 120 {}Days | ✅ Met (Target {3}×) |
| Solution | Scenario | Expected Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Shorten restock batches | MOQ allows small batches | Reduce tied-up capital by 20–30% |
| Set clearance prices | Slow-moving SKUs > 90 days | Quickly recover cash |
| Optimize ads | Low sales but healthy margins | Boost sales velocity, lower DSI |
| Move to 3PL | High FBA long-term fees | Reduce storage cost pressure |
Inventory turnover is the ratio that tells you how many times your total inventory is sold and replaced over a given period. A high turnover means you are converting stock into revenue efficiently—your capital is cycling through rather than sitting in a warehouse. A low turnover signals slow-moving inventory, which in Amazon FBA terms translates directly into long-term storage fees, increased carrying costs, and capital tied up in goods that are not generating returns. The Inventory Turnover Calculator computes three key metrics from your inputs: the inventory turnover ratio (times per period), the Days Sales of Inventory (DSI), and the estimated capital tied up in average inventory. It also benchmarks your turnover against industry-typical ranges for six Amazon product categories—consumer electronics, home and kitchen, apparel, toys, tools, and sports and outdoors—so you can see at a glance whether your inventory velocity is healthy for your category. Whether you are evaluating a single SKU, a product line, or your entire catalog's performance over a quarter, inventory turnover is the diagnostic number that reveals whether your supply chain decisions are creating or destroying financial efficiency.
Inventory Turnover Ratio and DSI: What They Measure and Why They Matter
The inventory turnover ratio is calculated by dividing the Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) for a period by the average inventory value during that same period. COGS represents the direct cost of the units you sold—purchase price multiplied by units sold. Average inventory is the midpoint of your beginning and ending inventory values: (beginning inventory + ending inventory) / 2. The formula yields a dimensionless number: a turnover of 6 means your inventory turned over six times in the period, or roughly every two months. Days Sales of Inventory (DSI) is the reciprocal expression of the same metric: DSI = (average inventory / COGS) × number of days in the period. Where turnover gives you a cycle count, DSI gives you a duration—the average number of days your inventory sits before being sold. A DSI of 60 means your goods spend about 60 days in inventory before selling. DSI is more intuitively actionable for FBA sellers because Amazon's storage fee structure directly references how many days goods have been in a fulfillment center. Amazon assesses aged inventory surcharges progressively from 181 days on standard-size items, with long-term storage fees on goods stored beyond 365 days. The relationship between DSI and working capital is direct: every additional day in DSI represents one more day that your capital is locked in inventory rather than available for reinvestment in new stock, marketing, or product development. A seller with $50,000 in average inventory and a DSI of 90 days effectively extends an interest-free loan of $50,000 to their supply chain for three months. Reducing DSI by 30 days for that seller frees approximately $16,700 in working capital—cash that can be redeployed to faster-turning products or growth initiatives. Inventory turnover is therefore not just an operational efficiency metric; it is a measure of capital productivity.
Industry Turnover Benchmarks for Amazon Sellers
Different product categories have fundamentally different natural turnover rates, driven by product lifecycle, seasonality, replenishment frequency, and consumer demand patterns. Consumer electronics (3C) products tend to have high turnover rates—often 8–12x annually—because rapid model cycles, promotional pricing, and strong demand velocity keep stock moving. Home and kitchen goods typically turn at 4–8x annually; demand is steadier and less promotional, but products face less risk of obsolescence. Apparel and shoes experience high seasonality, with spring/summer and fall/winter inventory cycles driving concentrated demand windows—effective annual turnover can be 4–6x for seasonal lines, with the risk of large end-of-season residuals if demand estimates miss. Toys and games are the most seasonally concentrated category on Amazon: Q4 (October through December) accounts for a disproportionate share of annual toy sales. A seller who stocks heavily for Q4 and sells through effectively may achieve a full-year turnover of 6–8x despite near-zero turnover in Q1 and Q2. Tools and hardware, and sports and outdoors, tend to be less seasonal, typically turning at 4–6x annually. The benchmarks in this tool are reference ranges, not guarantees. A premium product sold at high margins may be perfectly profitable with a DSI of 150 days if the margin more than offsets the carrying cost. Conversely, a low-margin commodity product cannot absorb the same carrying cost and needs a DSI well below 60 to remain viable. Use the benchmark table as an initial diagnostic: if your turnover falls well below the healthy range for your category, investigate whether you have a demand problem (insufficient sales velocity), a procurement problem (over-ordering), or a pricing problem (insufficient conversion driving slow turns).
Strategies to Improve Inventory Turnover Without Sacrificing Margins
Improving inventory turnover requires either increasing the rate at which you sell goods (velocity) or decreasing the amount of inventory you hold at any given time (holding level), or ideally both. On the velocity side, the most direct levers are pricing and advertising. A price reduction increases conversion rate and accelerates sell-through—but must be carefully modeled against the margin impact. Advertising (Amazon Sponsored Products, Sponsored Brands) drives incremental traffic that converts to additional sales and higher velocity. A/B testing listing images, titles, and A+ Content can improve organic conversion rates without cost per click. On the holding level side, the most powerful tool is reducing your reorder quantity and increasing reorder frequency—accepting slightly higher per-unit cost in exchange for lower average inventory. This trade-off makes sense when the cost of capital tied up in inventory (interest or opportunity cost) exceeds the cost premium of smaller orders. For FBA sellers, coordinating restock timing with Amazon's inbound lead times and fulfillment center availability is critical—sending inventory before Amazon can receive it efficiently just results in increased storage time before items become available for sale. For SKUs with DSI exceeding 180 days, options narrow to markdown pricing, external sales channels, or liquidation. The cost of holding dead stock—storage fees, capital opportunity cost, risk of obsolescence—typically exceeds the apparent loss from a markdown. The calculator's warning thresholds help you identify these situations early, before the economics deteriorate further.
How to Use the Inventory Turnover Calculator
- Select the time period for your analysis—Annual (365 days), Quarterly (90 days), or Monthly (30 days). Ensure your COGS figure corresponds to the same period you select.
- Enter your Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) for the selected period. COGS is the total purchase cost of units sold: unit cost multiplied by units sold during the period. Use the cost side only, not revenue.
- Enter your beginning and ending inventory values in USD. Beginning inventory is the value of stock on hand at the start of the period; ending inventory is the value at the end. The calculator uses the average of these two figures.
- Review the results: inventory turnover ratio (times per period), DSI (average days in inventory), and tied-up capital (average inventory value). A lower DSI indicates faster capital recycling and lower storage fee risk.
- Compare your results against the industry benchmark table. If your turnover falls below the healthy range for your category, review the suggested improvement strategies—smaller restock batches, promotional pricing for slow-moving SKUs, or advertising to drive velocity.