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Hello - I recently took on a client who is a construction contractor. He provides installation services to resident homes. His contract is with one customer and that is a large home inporovement store. They supply everything, however often times he has to purchase additional materials for various reasons. Sometimes it’s tools he’ll use later on other jobs. So my question is on the additional and unexpected supplies and materials he uses to install on job does that go to COGS or expenses and does the tools book as inventory? Sometimes he eats the cost of materials or bills it back to store he has contract with.
Thanks in advance for your suggestions and help.
Let's break these apart a bit:
"They supply everything, however often times he has to purchase additional materials for various reasons."
If that is materials to be consumed on the job, that is COGS and can be job tracked, as directly for that job, if that also matters. If that is, for instance, he is getting low on Caulking and needs to pick some up while en route, that is just Supplies expense.
"Sometimes it’s tools he’ll use later on other jobs."
Tools are Never COGS. Saws, for instance, are either Fixed assets or his own Equipment expense. COGS would be Saw Blades that get used on the job; if they last 2-5 years, that is also not COGS. That is Supplies expense.
"So my question is on the additional and unexpected supplies and materials he uses to install on job does that go to COGS or expenses and does the tools book as inventory?"
He is not Buying tools to sell them as a retailer, so nothing here is Inventory.
"Sometimes he eats the cost of materials"
Yes, you Always see this as Gross COGS. "Eats" just means, there is no direct offsetting Income from this; his Contract Price Point is supposed to cover the incidental and direct costs, the costs for operations, overhead, operating the vehicle, etc.
"or bills it back to store he has contract with."
Which then makes an Income flow, as gross revenue. But a Contract con be "cost inclusive" like a Bid Price. I would not charge you for individual supplies if we agreed to a Fixed Bid Contract.
I am on the same page as you. However, my client was insisting it wasn’t COGS or in better words it’s COS, right? I know it falls under same in QB. My niche is construction, but his situation is a bit different than most. He doesn’t job cost either.
Anyhow thank you you very much! Very helpful.
These are Synonyms: "my client was insisting it wasn’t COGS or in better words it’s COS, right?"
Costs of Sales = directly related to what I sell. Cost of Goods Sold = I sell Goods that I purchase.
"I know it falls under same in QB. My niche is construction, but his situation is a bit different than most. He doesn’t job cost either."
Look at the tax form this entity files. COGS on this form, and the P&L, reports Highest in the Expenses as a Direct Expense account.
Gross Income
minus refunds/returns/allowances
= Net Sales
minus Direct Costs
= Gross Profit
minus Ordinary and Other expense
= Net Income.
Example:
When I worked for an Architectural firm, nearly all sales are Services, we never had COGS entries until we changed CPAs. The new CPA decided the drafting Staff labor = COGS. Fine. What they also did is prove we could take the Domestic Production allowance for taxes. Fine. That's why they call it a Tax Practice; no one has it Perfect, not even the IRS.
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