Hidden Costs That Affect Your COGS - Seller Bookkeeping
Seller Bookkeeping

Hidden Costs That Affect Your COGS

Don't Miss These Costs—Many Sellers Forget to Include Them in COGS Calculation

The COGS Calculation Problem

Most Amazon sellers calculate their Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) incorrectly. They add up the wholesale price from their supplier and call it done. In reality, COGS includes everything directly related to acquiring and preparing a product for sale—which includes a dozen hidden costs that most sellers overlook. The result? They believe they're profitable when they're actually breaking even or losing money. Missing just $2-3 per unit compounds to thousands of dollars in hidden losses annually.

Critical Truth: COGS isn't just the wholesale price. It includes shipping to your warehouse, packaging, labeling, quality inspections, duties, currency conversion losses, and supplier coordination. On a $50 product with a $10 wholesale cost, COGS might actually be $15-18 when you account for all hidden costs. This 5-8 dollars difference can eliminate your entire profit margin.

10 Hidden Costs in Your COGS

Shipping to Fulfillment Center

$1-5 per unit

Cost to ship from supplier to Amazon FBA warehouse (air, sea, trucking). Often overlooked because it's "lumped" into one invoice.

Product Inspection & QC

$0.50-2 per unit

Third-party inspection services to verify quality before shipment. Prevents damaged goods from reaching customers.

Packaging & Boxes

$0.50-3 per unit

Individual packaging, bubble wrap, mailers, tissue paper. Not just the box—all protective materials.

Labeling & Barcodes

$0.10-0.50 per unit

Barcode stickers, poly bags, label printing. Amazon requires specific labeling (FNSKU) for FBA.

Customs & Import Duties

$1-8 per unit

Tariffs, duties, brokerage fees on international shipments. Hidden in "landed cost" but massive for imported goods.

Currency Conversion Losses

1-3% loss

If buying from China/overseas, currency fluctuations between order and payment. PayPal/bank conversion fees add up.

Supplier Communication

$0.25-1 per unit

Time spent negotiating, correcting orders, resolving issues. Usually not tracked but adds up (allocate to COGS).

Product Customization/Prep

$1-5 per unit

Assembly, testing, software updates, branding prep. Any work needed before FBA acceptance.

Temporary Storage

$0.10-1 per unit

Warehouse fees while waiting for consolidated shipments to FBA. Adds up if products sit 30+ days.

Returns & Defective Units

$0.50-3 per unit

Percentage of units received damaged/defective and must be replaced. Allocate this loss to per-unit cost.

The Complete COGS Formula

True COGS per Unit = Wholesale Price + Shipping + Packaging + Labeling + QC + Duties + Storage + Prep + (Defect Rate Loss)

Let's work through a real example:

Cost ComponentAmount
Wholesale price from supplier$10.00
Shipping to US (per unit share)+$2.50
Packaging, boxes, tissue+$1.00
Labeling + FNSKU barcode+$0.25
QC inspection fee+$0.75
Tariffs and import duties (5%)+$0.60
Temporary storage (per unit)+$0.25
Defect/damage allowance (3%)+$0.35
TRUE COGS per Unit:$15.70
Seller's calculated COGS:$10.00
HIDDEN LOSS per unit:$5.70 (57% undercount!)

If this seller prices the product at $25 and sells 1,000 units per month:

  • Seller thinks profit: ($25 - $10 COGS - $3.75 fees) × 1,000 = $11,250/month
  • Actual profit: ($25 - $15.70 COGS - $3.75 fees) × 1,000 = $5,550/month
  • Difference: $5,700/month ($68,400/year) in hidden losses!

Calculate Your True COGS

Hidden Costs Calculator

Percentage of units lost to damage/defects

Wholesale Price: $0.00
Shipping: $0.00
Packaging: $0.00
Labeling + QC + Duties + Storage: $0.00
Defect Allowance: $0.00
TRUE COGS per Unit: $0.00
Hidden Costs You Missed: $0.00

How to Track These Costs

Knowing what to include is half the battle. Here's how to actually track these costs systematically:

For Each Product, Maintain a Cost Spreadsheet:

  • Supplier Invoice: Wholesale price, quantities, date
  • Shipping Invoice: Actual cost to ship this batch to FBA
  • QC Report: Inspection costs and % defect rate
  • Packaging Receipts: Every box, label, tissue, tape
  • Duty Documentation: Customs invoices and tariff amounts
  • Storage Invoices: Warehouse hold time before FBA shipment

Then calculate per-unit cost: Total all costs ÷ Total units received = Per-Unit COGS

Account for Defects: If 50 of 1,000 units arrived damaged, you really have 950 sellable units. Distribute the full cost (including damaged units) across the 950 good units.

Real Impact on Profitability

Let's see how hidden costs destroy profit on various price points:

Sale PriceApparent COGSReal COGSActual vs Apparent Profit (per unit)
$25 product$10$15.70-$5.70 per unit (57% overcount)
$49.99 product$15$22.50-$7.50 per unit (50% overcount)
$99.99 product$30$40-$10 per unit (33% overcount)
Budget $14.99$5$11.20-$6.20 per unit (124% overcount!)

Actions You Must Take Now

  • Audit Your Costs: Go through your last 3 months of invoices. Calculate TRUE COGS for each product using all hidden costs above.
  • Identify Unprofitable Products: Many sellers find that 20-30% of their "profitable" products are actually losing money once hidden costs are included.
  • Adjust Prices or Exit: If true COGS is too high, raise prices or discontinue the product. Selling at a loss is worse than not selling at all.
  • Implement Tracking System: Use spreadsheets or accounting software (QuickBooks, Xero) to automatically capture all costs per SKU.
  • Negotiate with Suppliers: Now that you know your true costs, you can negotiate better prices with leverage.

Hidden Costs Facts

50%+

Sellers who undercount COGS by 50% or more

$5-10

Average hidden costs per unit missed

30%

Percentage of "profitable" items that lose money

$68K+

Annual profit loss from missing $5.70/unit on 1000 sales/month

3-5%

Typical defect/damage rate absorbed into COGS

15-25%

Tariff rates that inflate true costs

Hidden Costs FAQ

Are Amazon fees part of COGS?

No. Amazon fees (referral, fulfillment, storage) are NOT part of COGS. They're operating expenses. COGS is only the direct cost to acquire and prepare the product. Amazon fees are subtracted after COGS to calculate net profit.

Should I include labor costs in COGS?

Only if directly tied to product prep (assembly, testing, branding). General overhead like your salary or office rent is NOT part of COGS. However, if you hire someone specifically to inspect units before shipment, that's COGS.

How do I allocate shared shipping costs?

If you order 5 SKUs in one container (e.g., $5,000 shipping), divide by total units received. If 1,000 total units = $5 shipping per unit. Allocate that $5 to each product proportionally based on its unit quantity in that shipment.

What about currency conversion losses?

If buying from overseas and the USD weakens, you lose money on the conversion. Track this loss and include it in COGS. E.g., if you ordered at 100 CNY/USD but paid at 102 CNY/USD, the 2% loss goes into COGS.

Should I adjust COGS if prices drop mid-season?

Use the inventory accounting method your accountant recommends (FIFO, LIFO, or average cost). Most e-commerce sellers use average cost, which smooths price fluctuations. This prevents COGS from jumping around with market changes.

What if I can't track all these costs precisely?

At minimum, use industry averages. Inbound freight (5-10% of wholesale), packaging (10-15%), labeling (2-5%). Then add known costs like duties. Even rough estimates beat pretending these costs don't exist. Use software like Xero or QuickBooks to automate COGS tracking.

Is COGS the same on tax returns?

Yes! Your tax return MUST match your financial statements. COGS reported on Schedule C should equal what you calculated for profitability. This is why tracking is critical—IRS audits often focus on COGS discrepancies.

Can a CPA help calculate true COGS?

Absolutely. A CPA familiar with e-commerce ($150-300/hour) can help set up COGS tracking systems that save you thousands by identifying which products are actually profitable and which are profit killers.