Inbound shipping costs (freight-in): If the shipping charges are for 
transporting raw materials or inventory to your business (i.e., costs incurred 
to bring goods to your warehouse or manufacturing facility), these are 
typically included in COGS. These costs are part of what it takes to get the 
goods ready for sale.

Outbound shipping costs (freight-out): Shipping charges incurred when 
delivering goods to customers are generally not included in COGS. These are 
often classified as selling expenses or operating expenses. However, some 
companies choose to include outbound shipping in COGS if it is integral to 
delivering the product, but this depends on accounting policies

>From a personal capacity, inbound shipping cost should be part of the cost and 
>outbound should be expensed as operational.





Saludos Cordiales


Murugan

________________________________
From: gnucash-user 
<[email protected]> on behalf of 
Chris Miller via gnucash-user <[email protected]>
Sent: 02 October 2024 11:28
To: Boniforti Flavio <[email protected]>
Cc: GnuCash users group <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [GNC] Another "multi-account" logical issue - any advice on how to 
register this?

Hi Flavio,

> I will think about whether I want to consider the shipping expense as part
> of the value of the goods I bought or not. I understand the difference and
> keeping shipping costs separated from the goods value looks correct to me.
> However, I always considered shipping costs as part of the goods value. I
> thought "I paid 220 for this guitar, even though 20 are for shipping, so to
> me it's worth 220" (I know this is wrong, because shipping doesn't add
> value to the goods).

It is not wrong. Shipping does add to the value. The difference between 
potatoes in a field and potatoes in a store is basically shipping. You pay more 
for potatoes in a store because there is a cost to get them there.

You paid $200 for the guitar and $20 for shipping. If you sold the guitar for 
$200, are you breaking even?

The book value of an asset is the cost to acquire and deploy that asset. 
Shipping is clearly an acquisition or deployment cost.
--
Chris.
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