1125-A Cost of Goods Sold

U. S. Business Income Tax Return

f1125-a--2016-10-00

U. S. Business Income Tax Return

OMB: 1545-0123

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Form

1125-A

(Rev. October 2016)
Department of the Treasury
Internal Revenue Service
Name

Cost of Goods Sold
Employer identification number

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Inventory at beginning of year
Purchases . . . . . .

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Cost of labor . . . . . . . . . . .
Additional section 263A costs (attach schedule) .
Other costs (attach schedule) . . . . . .

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Total. Add lines 1 through 5 .
Inventory at end of year . .

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Cost of goods sold. Subtract line 7 from line 6. Enter here and on Form 1120, page 1, line 2 or the
appropriate line of your tax return. See instructions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Check all methods used for valuing closing inventory:
(i)
Cost

9a

OMB No. 1545-0123

Attach to Form 1120, 1120-C, 1120-F, 1120S, 1065, or 1065-B.
▶ Information about Form 1125-A and its instructions is at www.irs.gov/form1125a.
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b

Lower of cost or market
(ii)
Other (Specify method used and attach explanation.) ▶
(iii)
Check if there was a writedown of subnormal goods
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c

Check if the LIFO inventory method was adopted this tax year for any goods (if checked, attach Form 970)

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d

If the LIFO inventory method was used for this tax year, enter amount of closing inventory computed
under LIFO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9d
If property is produced or acquired for resale, do the rules of section 263A apply to the entity? See instructions .

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Was there any change in determining quantities, cost, or valuations between opening and closing inventory? If “Yes,”
attach explanation
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Section references are to the Internal
Revenue Code unless otherwise noted.

General Instructions
Purpose of Form
Use Form 1125-A to calculate and deduct
cost of goods sold for certain entities.

Who Must File
Filers of Form 1120, 1120-C, 1120-F,
1120S, 1065, or 1065-B, must complete
and attach Form 1125-A if the applicable
entity reports a deduction for cost of goods
sold.

Inventories
Generally, inventories are required at the
beginning and end of each tax year if the
production, purchase, or sale of
merchandise is an income-producing
factor. See Regulations section 1.471-1. If
inventories are required, you generally
must use an accrual method of accounting
for sales and purchases of inventory items.
Exception for certain taxpayers. If you
are a qualifying taxpayer or a qualifying
small business taxpayer (defined below),
you can adopt or change your accounting
method to account for inventoriable items
in the same manner as materials and
supplies that are not incidental.

Under this accounting method, inventory
costs for raw materials purchased for use
in producing finished goods and
merchandise purchased for resale are
deductible in the year the finished goods or
merchandise are sold (but not before the
year you paid for the raw materials or
merchandise, if you are also using the cash
method).
If you account for inventoriable items in
the same manner as materials and supplies
that are not incidental, you can currently
deduct expenditures for direct labor and all
indirect costs that would otherwise be
included in inventory costs. See the
instructions for lines 2 and 7.
For additional guidance on this method
of accounting, see Pub. 538, Accounting
Periods and Methods. For guidance on
adopting or changing to this method of
accounting, see Form 3115, Application for
Change in Accounting Method, and its
instructions.
Qualifying taxpayer. A qualifying
taxpayer is a taxpayer that, (a) for each
prior tax year ending after December 16,
1998, has average annual gross receipts of
$1 million or less for the 3 prior tax years,
and (b) its business is not a tax shelter (as
defined in section 448(d)(3)). See Rev.
Proc. 2001-10, 2001-2 I.R.B. 272.
Qualifying small business taxpayer. A
qualifying small business taxpayer is a
taxpayer that, (a) for each prior tax year

For Paperwork Reduction Act Notice, see instructions.

Cat. No. 55988R

Yes

No

Yes

No

ending on or after December 31, 2000, has
average annual gross receipts of $10
million or less for the 3 prior tax years, (b)
whose principal business activity is not an
ineligible activity, and (c) whose business is
not a tax shelter (as defined in section 448
(d)(3)). See Rev. Proc. 2002-28, 2002-18
I.R.B. 815.
Uniform capitalization rules. The uniform
capitalization rules of section 263A
generally require you to capitalize, or
include in inventory, certain costs incurred
in connection with the following.
• The production of real property and
tangible personal property held in inventory
or held for sale in the ordinary course of
business.
• Real property or personal property
(tangible and intangible) acquired for resale.
• The production of real property and
tangible personal property by a corporation
for use in its trade or business or in an
activity engaged in for profit.
See the discussion on section 263A
uniform capitalization rules in the
instructions for your tax return before
completing Form 1125-A. Also see
Regulations sections 1.263A-1 through
1.263A-3. See Regulations section
1.263A-4 for rules for property produced in
a farming business.

Form 1125-A (Rev. 10-2016)

Form 1125-A (Rev. 10-2016)

Specific Instructions
Line 1. Inventory at Beginning of
Year
If you are changing your method of
accounting for the current tax year, you
must refigure last year's closing inventory
using the new method of accounting. Enter
the result on line 1. If there is a difference
between last year's closing inventory and
the refigured amount, attach an
explanation and take it into account when
figuring any section 481(a) adjustment.

Line 2. Purchases
If you account for inventoriable items in the
same manner as materials and supplies
that are not incidental, enter amounts paid
for all raw materials and merchandise
during the tax year on line 2. The amount
you can deduct for the tax year is figured
on line 8.
Reduce purchases by items withdrawn
for personal use. For a partnership, the
cost of these items should be shown on
Schedule K and Schedule K-1 as
distributions to partners.

Line 4. Additional Section 263A
Costs
If you elected a simplified method of
accounting, enter on line 4 the balance of
section 263A costs paid or incurred during
the tax year not includible on lines 2, 3, and
5.
If you elected the simplified production
method, additional section 263A costs are
generally those costs, other than interest,
that were not capitalized under your
method of accounting immediately prior to
the effective date of section 263A, but are
now required to be capitalized under
section 263A. For details, see Regulations
section 1.263A-2(b).
If you elected the simplified resale
method, additional section 263A costs are
generally those costs incurred with respect
to the following categories.
• Off-site storage or warehousing.
• Purchasing.
• Handling, such as processing,
assembling, repackaging, and transporting.
• General and administrative costs (mixed
service costs).

Line 5. Other Costs
Enter on line 5 any costs paid or incurred
during the tax year not entered on lines 2
through 4. Attach a statement listing details
of the costs.

Special Rules for Cooperatives
Cooperatives are allowed to deduct certain
per-unit retain allocations. Include these
costs on line 5. Attach a statement listing
details of per-unit retain allocations paid in:
• Qualified per-unit retain certificates,
• Money or other property (except
nonqualified per-unit certificates), and
• Nonqualified per-unit retain certificates
redeemed this year.

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Per-unit retain allocations. A cooperative
is allowed to deduct from its taxable
income amounts paid during the payment
period for the tax year as per-unit retain
allocations to the extent paid in money,
qualified per-unit retain certificates, or
other property with respect to marketing
occurring during the tax year. A per-unit
retain allocation is any allocation from a
cooperative to a patron for products
marketed for him without reference to the
cooperative net earnings. A qualified perunit retain certificate is any per-unit retain
certificate that the distributee has agreed
to take into account at its stated dollar
amount.
Nonqualified per-unit retain certificates
redeemed this year. Include the amount
paid in money or other property (except
amounts already included as per-unit retain
certificates) to patrons to redeem
nonqualified per-unit retain certificates. No
deduction is allowed at the time of
issuance for a nonqualified per-unit retain
certificate. However, the cooperative may
take a deduction in the year the certificate
is redeemed, subject to the stated dollar
amount of the certificate. See section 1383.
Also see the instructions for line 29h of
Form 1120-C, U.S. Income Tax Return for
Cooperative Associations, for a special rule
for figuring the cooperative's tax in the year
of redemption of a nonqualified per-unit
retain certificate.

Line 7. Inventory at End of Year
See Regulations sections 1.263A-1 through
1.263A-3 for details on figuring the amount
of additional section 263A costs to be
included in ending inventory. If you account
for inventoriable items in the same manner
as materials and supplies that are not
incidental, enter on line 7 the portion of
your raw materials and merchandise
purchased for resale that was included in
the total on line 6 but was not sold during
the year.

Line 8. Cost of Goods Sold
Enter the amount from line 8 on your tax
return as follows. Filers of Form 1120,
1120-C, 1120S, 1065, and 1065-B, enter
cost of goods sold on page 1, line 2. Filers
of Form 1120-F, enter cost of goods sold
on Section II, line 2.

Lines 9a Through 9f. Inventory
Valuation Methods
Inventories can be valued at:
• Cost,
• Cost or market value (whichever is lower),
or
• Any other method approved by the IRS
that conforms to the requirements of the
applicable regulations cited below.
However, if you are using the cash
method of accounting, you are required to
use cost.

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Filers that use erroneous valuation
methods must change to a method
permitted for federal income tax purposes.
Use Form 3115 to make this change.
For more information on inventory
valuation methods, see Pub. 538. For more
information on changes in the method of
accounting for inventory, see Form 3115
and the Instructions for Form 3115.
Line 9a. Method of valuing closing
inventory. On line 9a, check the method(s)
used for valuing inventories. Under lower of
cost or market, the term “market” (for
normal goods) means the current bid price
prevailing on the inventory valuation date
for the particular merchandise in the
volume usually purchased by the filer. For a
manufacturer, market applies to the basic
elements of cost—raw materials, labor, and
burden. If section 263A applies, the basic
elements of cost must reflect the current
bid price of all direct costs and all indirect
costs properly allocable to goods on hand
at the inventory date.
Inventory may be valued below cost
when the merchandise is unsalable at
normal prices or unusable in the normal
way because the goods are subnormal due
to damage, imperfections, shopwear,
change of style, odd or broken lots, or
other similar causes, including secondhand goods taken in exchange. The goods
may be valued at the bona fide selling
price, minus the direct cost of disposition
(but not less than scrap value). Bona fide
selling price means actual offering of
goods during a period ending not later than
30 days after inventory date.
Lines 9c and 9d. LIFO method. If this is
the first year the Last-in, First-out (LIFO)
inventory method was either adopted or
extended to inventory goods not previously
valued under the LIFO method provided in
section 472, attach Form 970, Application
To Use LIFO Inventory Method, or a
statement with the information required by
Form 970. Check the LIFO box on line 9c.
On line 9d, enter the amount of total
closing inventories computed under
section 472. Estimates are acceptable.
If you changed or extended your
inventory method to LIFO and had to write
up the opening inventory to cost in the year
of election, report the effect of the write-up
as other income, on your applicable return,
proportionately over a 3-year period that
begins with the year of the LIFO election.

Form 1125-A (Rev. 10-2016)

Note: Entities using the LIFO method that
make an S corporation election or transfer
LIFO inventory to an S corporation in a
nonrecognition transaction may be subject
to an additional tax attributable to the LIFO
recapture amount. See the instructions for
Form 1120, Schedule J, line 11.
Line 9e. If property is produced or
acquired for resale and the rules of section
263A apply to the corporation, cooperative,
partnership, or other applicable entity,
check the “Yes” box on line 9e.
Paperwork Reduction Act Notice. We
ask for the information on this form to carry
out the Internal Revenue laws of the United
States. You are required to give us the

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information. We need it to ensure that you
are complying with these laws and to allow
us to figure and collect the right amount of
tax.
You are not required to provide the
information requested on a form that is
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act
unless the form displays a valid OMB
control number. Books or records relating
to a form or its instructions must be
retained as long as their contents may
become material in the administration of
any Internal Revenue law. Generally, tax
returns and return information are
confidential, as required by section 6103.

3

The time needed to complete and file
this form will vary depending on individual
circumstances. The estimated burden for
business taxpayers filing this form is
approved under OMB control number
1545-0123 and is included in the estimates
shown in the instructions for their business
income tax return.
If you have comments concerning the
accuracy of these time estimates or
suggestions for making this form simpler,
we would be happy to hear from you. See
the instructions for the tax return with
which this form is filed.


File Typeapplication/pdf
File TitleForm 1125-A (Rev. October 2016)
SubjectCost of Goods Sold
AuthorSE:W:CAR:MP
File Modified2016-10-19
File Created2016-10-19

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