IRS Forms

Form 1125-A – COGS Guide for Corporations & Partnerships

Form 1125-A guide to COGS, Line 9 valuation, LIFO Form 970, 2025 263A rules, and 1120/1120-S/1065 due dates, plus checklists and practical tips.

Accountably Editorial Team 10 min read Nov 22, 2025 Updated Nov 22, 2025
A few March seasons ago, a controller pinged me at 9,10 p.m., worried about a stubborn 40,000 mismatch between her inventory subledger and the draft Form 1125‑A. Purchases looked fine. The issue was hiding in plain sight, a missing freight‑in rollup, a skipped 263A schedule, and the wrong box on Line 9.

We fixed the workpapers, checked the right boxes, and the reviewer signed off the next morning. If you have ever felt that last‑mile pressure, this guide will help you get Form 1125‑A right the first time.

Think of Form 1125‑A as the place where your inventory story turns into tax math. Clean inputs and clear Line 9 choices produce a COGS number that ties to your GL and your return.

Key Takeaways

  • Form 1125‑A reports cost of goods sold, and you must attach it if your corporation or partnership carries inventory and files Forms 1120, 1120‑S, 1120‑F, 1120‑C, 1065, or 1065‑B. The Line 8 total flows to the parent return.
  • Lines 1 through 8 add beginning inventory, purchases, direct labor, required Section 263A costs, and other costs, then subtract ending inventory to arrive at COGS.
  • Line 9 documents your inventory valuation, write‑downs, LIFO adoption and figures, whether Section 263A applies, and any method or quantity changes. Keep support with the return.
  • For tax years beginning in 2025, the small business gross receipts threshold tied to sections 448(c) and 471(c) is 31,000,000. That threshold drives eligibility for simplified inventory methods and the Section 263A small business exemption.
  • Filing deadlines follow the parent return. If you need more time to file, submit Form 7004. It extends filing, not payment.

What Is Form 1125‑A

Form 1125‑A, Cost of Goods Sold, is the schedule you attach to your business return when inventory is a factor. You use it to reconcile beginning and ending inventory with purchases, production, and any required capitalizations. The number on Line 8 carries to the COGS line on your parent return, such as Form 1120, 1120‑S, 1120‑F, 1120‑C, or 1065.

What actually happens on the form is straightforward.

  • Line 1, beginning inventory, normally equals last year’s ending inventory.
  • Lines 2 to 5, add purchases, direct labor, Section 263A costs when required, and other production costs like freight‑in and factory supplies.
  • Line 6 totals goods available for sale.
  • Line 7 subtracts ending inventory.
  • Line 8, COGS, flows to the parent return.

Who Must File Form 1125‑A

You file Form 1125‑A if your corporation or partnership carries inventory and reports COGS on Forms 1120, 1120‑S, 1120‑F, 1120‑C, 1065, or 1065‑B. Pure service businesses generally do not attach it. Sole proprietors usually report COGS on Schedule C with Form 1040 rather than using Form 1125‑A.

Inventory‑Based Businesses and 471(c) Options

If you meet the small business gross receipts test under section 448(c), you may use simplified inventory methods under section 471(c), for example non‑incidental materials and supplies, the AFS method, or a non‑AFS method aligned to your books. The 2025 inflation‑adjusted threshold is 31,000,000 of average annual gross receipts for the prior three years. These options coordinate with how you complete Line 9.

Where People Get Stuck

In my reviews, the same three issues drive rework, beginning inventory does not tie to last year’s workpapers, freight‑in is scattered across expense accounts, and Line 9 is checked without a memo to back it up. A one‑page rollforward, a clean freight‑in rollup, and a short valuation memo save hours in March.

When to File and 2025 Examples

File Form 1125‑A with your parent return by the due date for that return. For S corporations in a calendar year, the general rule is the 15th day of the third month after year end. In 2025, that falls on Monday, March 17, since March 15 is Saturday. Partnerships follow the same third‑month rule. C corporations generally file on the 15th day of the fourth month after year end.

If you need more time to file, use Form 7004. It gives you an automatic extension to file if you submit it by the original due date, but it does not extend time to pay. Pay by the original due date to limit penalties and interest.

Quick tip, file the extension if you are close to the deadline, then finish the inventory tie‑outs calmly. The penalty for filing late is usually worse than the penalty for paying late.

Components of Cost of Goods Sold

You will map direct materials and direct labor first, then capture overhead and any Section 263A capitalized costs.

  • Line 1, beginning inventory, should match last year’s closing balance unless a method change requires a refigured opening balance.
  • Line 2, purchases, include items for resale or production, remove owner or personal withdrawals.
  • Line 3, direct labor, include production wages and related payroll costs, keep administrative and selling payroll out of COGS.
  • Line 4, additional Section 263A costs, if applicable, attach an itemized schedule.
  • Line 5, other costs, capture freight‑in, factory supplies, and similar production costs.
  • Line 6, total goods available for sale.
  • Line 7, ending inventory, tie to your subledger and valuation method.
  • Line 8, COGS, flows to the parent return.

Direct Materials and Direct Labor

  • Direct materials either go through purchases or beginning and ending inventory to the Line 8 math.
  • Direct labor belongs on Line 3. Retailers rarely have labor that qualifies as direct production labor. Manufacturers typically do. Keep a short schedule that ties these wages to specific production roles.

Overhead, What Goes In

Overhead is where many filings drift. Factory rent, utilities for production, depreciation on manufacturing equipment, and supervision tied to making the product often belong in inventory and COGS, not SG&A. Your books can show more detail than the return, so use a simple one‑pager to roll these amounts into the proper lines for Form 1125‑A.

Section 263A, The 2025 Reality

Thanks to the small business exemption, many filers under the inflation‑adjusted threshold can answer No on Line 9e and skip UNICAP. That threshold is 31,000,000 for tax years beginning in 2025, measured as average annual gross receipts for the prior three years, applying the aggregation rules. If you are over the threshold, answer Yes on Line 9e and attach a schedule to support Line 4.

Quick 263A Reference for 2025

Item 2025 position What you do
448(c) gross receipts test 31,000,000 threshold Determine eligibility for 471(c) inventory simplifications and the 263A exemption.
Over threshold 263A generally applies Capitalize required indirects, attach Line 4 schedule, check Yes on 9e.
Under threshold 263A often not required Usually check No on 9e, document the test and aggregation.

Keep a one‑page memo in the file that shows your three‑year gross receipts test, the entities aggregated, and the conclusion for Line 9e. Reviewers rely on it, and it closes questions faster.

Step‑by‑Step, Completing Lines 1 through 8

  • Line 1, beginning inventory. Use last year’s ending inventory unless you changed methods. If you changed methods, refigure opening inventory and document any section 481(a) adjustment in your method change package.
  • Line 2, purchases. Include only items for resale or production and remove owner withdrawals. Partnerships should show those withdrawals as distributions, not purchases.
  • Line 3, cost of labor. Include production wages and related payroll costs, not administrative or selling payroll.
  • Line 4, additional Section 263A costs. Enter capitalizable indirects if you are above the threshold or otherwise subject to UNICAP, then attach a schedule that shows your pools and methods.
  • Line 5, other costs. Record freight‑in, direct overhead, and production supplies. Keep a simple rollup to speed review.
  • Line 6, total goods available for sale, add Lines 1 through 5.
  • Line 7, ending inventory, tie to your inventory subledger and valuation method on Line 9.
  • Line 8, cost of goods sold, subtract Line 7 from Line 6, then carry to the parent return’s COGS line.

A Quick Real‑World Example

You are a calendar‑year distributor. Beginning inventory is 500,000. Purchases are 2,800,000. Direct labor is 120,000. Freight‑in is 90,000. You pass the 448(c) test for 2025, so 263A does not apply. Ending inventory at cost is 640,000.

  • Line 1, 500,000
  • Lines 2 to 5, 3,010,000
  • Line 6, 3,510,000
  • Line 7, 640,000
  • Line 8, 2,870,000

On Line 9a, you select Cost. On 9e, you answer No. Keep the threshold calculation and inventory rollforward with the return.

Inventory Valuation and Line 9, Small Box, Big Impact

Line 9 sets the rules of your closing inventory. Do not rush it.

  • 9a, valuation method. Check Cost, Lower of Cost or Market, or describe Other. For eligible small business taxpayers, your books‑conforming 471(c) choices, for example non‑incidental materials and supplies, AFS, or non‑AFS, also come into play. Keep a short valuation memo in your workpapers.
  • 9b, writedown of subnormal goods. If you marked down damaged or obsolete stock that remains in ending inventory, disclose and keep the support with the return.
  • 9c, LIFO adoption. Check this if you adopted LIFO this year and attach Form 970.
  • 9d, if using LIFO, report the LIFO closing inventory and the LIFO reserve.
  • 9e, Section 263A applicability. Answer Yes if UNICAP applies, No if you are eligible for the small business exemption or otherwise outside scope.
  • 9f, changes in quantities, costs, or valuations. If something changed between opening and closing inventory, attach an explanation and consider whether Form 3115 is required for a method change.

Adopting LIFO, What To Know

To adopt LIFO you must file Form 970 with your timely filed return for the first year you use LIFO. If you missed the election on the original filing, you can generally file an amended return within 12 months and mark the filing under the 301.9100‑2 relief statement, then attach Form 970. LIFO changes later come with consent procedures and waiting periods, so plan your adoption carefully and keep the method statement and computations with your return.

Simple sanity check, if you check 9c, you should also see Form 970 in the e‑file package and a LIFO reserve on 9d. Reviewers will look for that trio.

Practical Tips, Review Checks, and Common Pitfalls

  • Tie Line 1 to last year’s Line 7. If there is a variance, include a short explanation and reference any section 481(a) entry for method changes.
  • Keep purchases clean. Remove owner withdrawals and personal items from Line 2, show those properly elsewhere if you are a partnership.
  • Centralize freight‑in. If freight‑in is scattered, roll it up in one schedule that feeds Line 5.
  • Decide your 263A position early. If you exceed the 448(c) threshold, prepare the Line 4 schedule and check Yes on 9e. If you qualify for the exemption, document the test and your aggregation conclusion.
  • Respect LIFO procedures. Adopting LIFO needs Form 970, and later changes often require consent. Track your LIFO reserve and keep IPIC details, if used.

Workpaper Structure That Speeds Review

  • One‑page COGS rollforward that mirrors Lines 1 through 8.
  • Inventory valuation memo referencing your Line 9a choice and any book to tax differences.
  • 263A schedule, if applicable, with cost pools and allocation method.
  • LIFO file, if applicable, with Form 970, method statement, closing LIFO reserve, and tie‑outs to the GL.

FAQs

What is Form 1125‑A in plain terms

It is the schedule where you compute COGS for corporate and partnership returns that carry inventory. You list beginning and ending inventory, purchases, direct labor, any required Section 263A costs, and other production costs, then you subtract ending inventory to get COGS for the parent return.

Do small businesses still have to use Section 263A

If you meet the 448(c) gross receipts test, you are generally exempt from UNICAP. For tax years beginning in 2025, the inflation‑adjusted amount is 31,000,000. Facts vary, so confirm aggregation and any special rules before you answer Line 9e.

If I adopt LIFO, what must I attach

Attach Form 970 in the year you adopt LIFO. If you use LIFO, complete Line 9d for the LIFO closing inventory and LIFO reserve, and keep your method statement and computations with the return.

What are the federal due dates for calendar‑year filers in 2025

For S corporations and partnerships, the due date is the 15th day of the third month. In 2025, that is Monday, March 17 because March 15 is Saturday. C corporations generally file on the 15th day of the fourth month after year end.

Does Form 7004 extend time to pay

No. It extends only time to file. Submit Form 7004 by the original due date and pay what you owe by that date to limit penalties and interest.

A 20‑Minute Close‑Out Checklist

  • Reconcile inventory, subledger to GL, then to Lines 1 and 7.
  • Confirm your 448(c) status for 2025, including aggregation, and document the 31,000,000 threshold test.
  • Decide and document valuation on 9a, including your 471(c) choice if eligible.
  • If 263A applies, prepare the Line 4 schedule and check Yes on 9e.
  • If adopting LIFO, attach Form 970 and complete 9d for LIFO closing inventory and reserve.
  • Check due dates and, if needed, file Form 7004 before the original due date.

What‑How‑Wow Summary

  • What, Form 1125‑A is the COGS schedule for corporations and partnerships with inventory. It feeds Line 8 to your return and documents valuation, LIFO, and 263A status.
  • How, Build Lines 1 through 8 with reconciled inventory and cost data, attach the 263A schedule when required, and complete Line 9 with the right methods and disclosures.
  • Wow, For 2025 the small business threshold is 31,000,000, which can exempt you from 263A and allow simplified inventory methods under 471(c). One number can change your whole workflow and documentation burden.

How This Connects To Reliable Delivery

If you run an accounting firm, you know growth often slows because delivery work jams, not because demand falls. Form 1125‑A is a classic example. Without standard workpapers, a clear Line 9 memo, and a consistent 263A position, files bounce in review and deadlines slip. Some firms partner with Accountably to stabilize production using SOP‑driven execution, standardized workpapers, and layered review, delivered inside your systems and templates. The result is fewer revision loops, quicker reviews, and clean filings your clients can trust. Mentioning this here because it touches delivery quality, not as a pitch.

Notes, Tools, and E‑E‑A‑T Signals

  • Tools we often see in the wild, QuickBooks, Xero, Lacerte, UltraTax, ProConnect, CCH Axcess, Drake. These support Form 1125‑A and can route depreciation and freight‑in correctly when set up well.
  • IRS anchors worth bookmarking, About Form 1125‑A, Instructions for Forms 1120 and 1120‑S, and the 7004 page for extensions.

Final Thoughts

You do not need a 40‑page memo to file Form 1125‑A well. You need tidy rollforwards, a clear Line 9 story, and a documented 263A position that reflects the current year threshold. Do that, and your reviewer will spend minutes, not hours. If you want help standardizing COGS workpapers across multiple entities and tax types, Accountably can assist inside your systems, with your templates, and your deadlines.

This article is educational, not tax advice. Rules change, and states differ. Confirm thresholds, deadlines, and elections against the current IRS instructions for your year and facts.

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