Inventory carrying costs explained: what excess stock really costs you

In supply chain management, excess and obsolete (E&O) stock isn’t just a storage problem, it’s a hidden drain on profitability. Research shows that carrying costs typically represent 20–30% of total inventory value each year.

For many businesses, this adds up to millions in lost capital before a single item is sold.


Understanding the components of carrying cost is the first step to controlling it.

Let’s break them down.

 

The Four Main Components of Carrying Cost

1. Capital Costs
The largest component. This is the opportunity cost of tying up money in stock that could
otherwise fuel innovation, expansion, or debt reduction. If inventory sits idle, so does your
capital.


2. Storage Costs
Includes rent, utilities, equipment, and labor to manage warehouses. In the U.S., industrial rents
alone average $6.50 per square foot, and that doesn’t include climate control or handling
equipment.


3. Service Costs
Insurance, taxes, and software for tracking stock all fall here. The more inventory you hold, the
higher these recurring costs climb.


4. Risk Costs
Shrinkage (theft, damage, loss), obsolescence, and depreciation. In fast-moving industries like
electronics, components can lose value rapidly, turning from asset to liability in a matter of
months.

The Real Cost of Doing Nothing

Holding on to surplus isn’t passive, it’s an active financial drain. U.S. businesses lose an
estimated $163 billion annually to waste, damage, and oversupply. Beyond that,
excess stock clogs warehouses, strains cash flow, and often ends up written off entirely.

Strategies to Reduce Carrying Costs

  • Tighten Order Quantities
    Work with suppliers to reduce minimum order sizes and shorten lead times, minimizing unnecessary stock.
  • Improve Demand Forecasting
    Better data analytics and cross-department alignment can reduce over-ordering and stockpiling.
  • Increase Inventory Visibility
    Use technology to track real-time stock levels and avoid duplication across sites or business units.
  • Adopt Circular Practices
    Instead of waiting for obsolescence, redirect or redistribute stock while it still holds value.
  • Leverage Surplus Marketplaces
    Platforms like Supply2Flow help companies recover value from excess inventory, free up space, and reduce carrying costs, while keeping materials in circulation and supporting ESG goals.

From Cost Center to Opportunity

Carrying costs will always exist, but they don’t have to erode margins.

By understanding each component and proactively managing surplus, businesses can unlock capital, improve agility, and contribute to a more sustainable supply chain.

Inventory should be a driver of growth, not a hidden burden. The companies that master this balance will be the ones most resilient in today’s unpredictable world.