As we roll into the final stretch of the year, it’s the perfect time for your consignment or resale store to hit pause (for just a moment!) and take stock—literally. A thorough year-end inventory isn’t just about closing the books. It’s about giving yourself a clear snapshot of where your business stands, what’s selling, and setting yourself up for success in the year ahead.
Why a Year-End Inventory Report Matters
Many stores view the year-end inventory as a tedious chore. But when done right, it’s an opportunity to:
- Confirm that your physical stock matches your records
- Identify discrepancies (whether from tagging errors, mis-placed items, etc).
- Evaluate what sold well and what didn’t — so you can decide what to carry forward or let go of.
- Get ready for tax/accounting season with clean data. Our Help Center has a great year-end article that points out where to find key numbers in SimpleConsign (e.g., “Cost of Goods for Store Owned Inventory … On the bottom right, in the Inventory Summary box you will see the starting inventory cost and ending inventory cost for the time period.”)
- Ultimately, set yourself up to hit the ground running in the new year.
Steps to Tackle Year-End
1. Pre-inventory checklist
Before you dive into counting and reconciling, take these preparatory steps:
Decide your inventory cut-off date
Pick one day (or a short window) when you’ll freeze activity for measuring inventory. Ideally, the last business day of the year, or the first day of the new year before you resume full operations. This helps ensure that reports and physical counts align.
Clean up your database
- Remove obviously obsolete items (e.g., that never sold and are no longer worth holding). Consider marking as “clearance” or “donated.”
- Ensure all items are correctly entered and tagged.
- Ensure each item has the correct status (consigned vs store-owned), category, location. Check out our blog article How to Manage Consignment Inventory Like a Pro for key tips on keeping accurate records and creating a system for tracking items.
Organize your physical space
- Ensure all items are properly shelved, tagged, and visible.
- Make a note of items that may be in storage, on layaway, or reserved so you won't miss them in the count.
- Consider using zones or sections to make counting easier (for example: men’s apparel, women’s accessories, furniture, etc.).
2. The counting and reconciliation process
Here’s where the work happens. Let’s break it down into actionable steps:
Step 1: Generate an Inventory Audit
- In SimpleConsign, we recommend running an inventory audit. With this, you can scan your inventory and the system will make the necessary adjustments to the quantity based on any differences in expected vs. actual inventory counts.
- Also pull inventory by category, by consignor, store-owned vs consigned—so you can slice the data later.
Step 2: Physical count
- Using the report as your baseline, walk the store and count items: every shelf, every rack, every storage room.
- For consignment stores, you’ll want to verify both store-owned inventory and items held on consignment (you may want to cross-check consignor “active” items separately).
- Use barcode/tag scanning if possible—it speeds things up and increases accuracy.
Step 3: Compare physical counts to records
- Compare the physical count to your inventory audit report. Note items missing and items that exist but are not in the system.
- Notice any discrepancies – did something get mis-tagged? Was an item sold but not removed from inventory? Document the “why” where possible (e.g., mis-priced item, tagging error, mis-placed items, donor items removed, etc.).
Step 4: Adjust and reconcile
- Make adjustments in your system for identified differences.
- Flag slow-moving or obsolete items for clearance or removal.
- Ensure consignor balances are accurate.
- Create a “clean” inventory list at year-end: this becomes your starting point for the new year.
3. What to do after inventory: clearance, restock, refresh
Inventory doesn’t stop once the count is done—now’s the time to act on the insights.
- Clear out slow-moving items
- Restock or rework strong-performing categories
- Review your category performance from the report you ran earlier—identify which categories had strong sell-through and which ones lagged behind. With the Store Insights App by SimpleConsign, you can easily track key store metrics like transactions, inventory counts, and sell-through rates, plus view your top and bottom-performing categories and brands. These insights make it easy to see what’s selling—and what’s not—so you can make smarter decisions moving forward.
- Check out Promoting High-Quality Inventory in Your Consignment Store to learn more about having the right inventory mix drives sales.
- Use your data to inform what you’ll ask consignors for and what to buy for store-owned inventory in the coming year.
- Tune your pricing and markdown strategy
Now is a good time to revisit your pricing strategy overall — slower items may need deeper markdowns or special promotions, while top sellers may sustain full price. Our blog How to Price Consignment Inventory for Maximum Profit covers this in more detail.
- Plan for the new year
With a clean inventory list and clear insight into performance, you can budget for new inventory, set sales goals, plan marketing campaigns, and schedule consignor drop-offs. Also consider your store layout, presentation, and merchandising refresh now that the new year is ahead.
4. How SimpleConsign helps you pull this off
We built SimpleConsign with tools to support the exact process above:
- Reporting & analytics: Use pre-built reports like Inventory by Category, Sales by Category, End of Day, etc., and build custom reports for deep dives.
- Inventory management features: Add, edit, transfer items, mark status (expired, returned), track buys and consignor splits.
- Consignor portal & access: Keeping consignors informed helps maintain trust — especially when reconciling items at year-end.
- Store Insights: If you want a quick high-level view (sell-through, top categories, etc.) you can access from our mobile app.
Timeline & Year-End Checklist
Here’s a sample timeline to keep your year-end inventory process manageable:
2–4 weeks before year-end: Clean up database; fix obvious data issues; organize floor & storage; inform team about year-end plans.
Cut-off day (last business day of year): Run an Inventory Audit in SimpleConsign.
Next business day(s): Do physical count; note differences; update system.
Within 1 week: Adjust items (clearance, donate, restock); run performance reports; plan for new year.
Within 2–4 weeks: Communicate results to team/consignors (if needed); implement markdowns; schedule consignor pickups or returns.
Early new year (January): Set targets, budgeting, marketing plan; schedule inventory check-in points (quarterly or monthly) so you're always in good shape.
End Your Year with Clarity & Start Your New Year Off Right
Yes — doing a year-end inventory takes effort. But when you treat it as a strategic business step rather than just a chore, it pays off. You’ll end the year with:
- Clean, accurate records
- A clear view of what you own and what you owe
- Insight into what worked (and what didn’t)
- A stronger foundation for the year ahead
If you’d like help with running specific reports in SimpleConsign, or want to schedule a review of your inventory workflows, let us know. We’re here for our resale community every step of the way.