An inventory asset is the value of products you have in stock, recorded as an asset on your balance sheet.
This matters because inventory represents money tied up in products waiting to be sold. Unlike expenses, inventory remains an asset until you sell it. Only then does it become a cost of goods sold (COGS).
QuickBooks tracks inventory assets in a dedicated account called “Inventory Asset,” which appears in your Chart of Accounts under Other Current Assets.
For example, if you have $10,000 worth of widgets in stock, QuickBooks lists this as an inventory asset on your balance sheet. That $10,000 represents potential revenue, not an expense.
You can view your inventory asset value in QuickBooks by running the Balance Sheet or Inventory Valuation Summary report. These reports show the current value of all products available to sell.
For multi-channel sellers, keeping this account accurate requires every sale on Amazon, Shopify, or in-store to update in QuickBooks in real time. If your QuickBooks plan does not include inventory tracking (such as QuickBooks Online Simple Start or Essentials), you will need to upgrade to Plus, Advanced, or use QuickBooks Desktop.
Now that you know what inventory assets are, let us look at why accurate accounting matters so much as you grow.
Suggested read: QuickBooks Online vs. Desktop: Which Is Best for You?
Inaccurate inventory accounting leads to misstated profits, surprise tax bills, and poor business decisions.
When your inventory records are wrong, every financial report becomes unreliable. You cannot trust your profit margins, cash flow projections, or tax calculations. For multi-channel sellers, these risks multiply with each additional sales channel.
Consider these critical impacts:
If you sell on more than one platform, these risks compound. Amazon might show 10 units while QuickBooks shows 5. That leads to overselling and customer refunds.
Manual reconciliation across channels can take hours every week. According to Webgility customers, automating this process saves up to 90% of time spent on reconciliation and month-end close.
For example, Channie, a multi-channel seller, spent two hours daily updating QuickBooks across multiple channels. After automating, they saved over 60 hours monthly and handled three times more orders.
So, how does QuickBooks keep track of your inventory assets behind the scenes?
QuickBooks automatically updates your inventory asset and COGS accounts every time you buy or sell inventory.
Understanding this flow helps you maintain accurate records and spot errors before they compound. Every transaction follows a predictable pattern, affecting multiple accounts at once.
Here is what happens at each stage:
When you purchase inventory:
When you sell an item:
Let us walk through a complete transaction:
You buy 100 widgets at $10 each, so QuickBooks adds $1,000 to Inventory Assets. You sell one widget for $20. QuickBooks reduces Inventory Assets by $10, increases COGS by $10, and records $20 in income. Your profit is $10 ($20 income minus $10 COGS).
You can see these updates in QuickBooks by running the Inventory Valuation Summary or reviewing journal entries for each transaction.
Whether a sale comes from Shopify, Amazon, or your POS, each transaction should update QuickBooks the same way. Accounting automation platforms like Webgility ensure every order and return is posted accurately, eliminating manual entry and errors.
But what happens when you are selling on multiple channels at once?
Suggested read: How to Calculate Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) in QuickBooks
Manual inventory tracking cannot keep up with multi-channel sales. Delayed or missed updates cause overselling, stockouts, inaccurate financials, and unhappy customers. Every platform operates on its own timeline, and without real-time sync, numbers drift apart fast.
Epic Mens saved more than 80 hours a week and scaled order volume by 42% after automating their inventory sync.
The pain points are clear:
So, what can you do to keep inventory accurate as your business grows?
Suggested read: 'Tis the Season to Prepare Your Inventory!
Clean inventory records start with good habits and the right tools. Here are five best practices for accurate ecommerce inventory management in QuickBooks as you scale:
Webgility users save up to 90% of time on reconciliation and month-end close, automate 10-15 hours of manual data entry every week, and close their books three times faster by automating inventory and sales sync.
When manual best practices are not enough, ecommerce automation becomes essential.
QuickBooks ecommerce automation tools sync every sale, return, and inventory update across all channels and QuickBooks in real time.
For multi-channel sellers, automation delivers three core benefits:
Webgility connects all major channels to QuickBooks and is trusted by more than 5,000 ecommerce businesses. With features like real-time inventory sync, multi-location support, and AI-powered product matching, Webgility helps you scale without adding staff or risking errors.
Bases Loaded achieved remarkable results with Webgility
Bases Loaded, a Webgility customer, grew from under 15 orders per day to 10,000 orders per month and increased revenue by 1.8x after automating their inventory sync.
Experience these inventory management automation capabilities yourself.
Book a demo today.
QuickBooks tracks inventory assets by updating your balance sheet and COGS accounts with each sale or purchase. For multi-channel sellers, automation tools ensure every transaction from each platform is reflected in QuickBooks in real time.
No, inventory tracking is only available in QuickBooks Online Plus, Advanced, or Desktop versions. You will need to upgrade if you want built-in inventory management features.
Each sale must update your inventory in QuickBooks to avoid overselling. Without real-time sync, numbers drift apart and errors multiply. Tools like Webgility automate this process across all channels.
Start by running the Inventory Valuation Summary and Inventory Valuation Detail reports in QuickBooks. Compare these with your physical counts and channel reports. Investigate and correct any discrepancies immediately.
Reconcile at least monthly, or weekly if you have high order volume. Regular checks catch errors before they become costly.
Use the Inventory Valuation Summary, Inventory Valuation Detail, and Sales by Product/Service reports in QuickBooks to monitor inventory value and movement.