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Inventory Shrinkage: 7 Causes and How to Reduce Losses

Inventory shrinkage costs retailers $100B+ annually. Learn the 7 main causes of stock loss and practical strategies to reduce shrinkage in your business.

F
Fluxventory Team
··5 min read

Your system says you have 142 units. You physically count 138.

Where did those 4 units go? They didn't just vanish — but in accounting terms, they did. That gap between what your records show and what you actually have is inventory shrinkage.

For most small businesses, shrinkage sits at 1-2% of annual sales. That might sound small, but for a business doing €500K in revenue, 2% is €10,000 of lost inventory — money you paid for but can't sell.

Here's what causes shrinkage and how to cut it down.

1. Administrative Errors (The Silent Culprit)

The most common cause of shrinkage isn't theft — it's mistakes in data entry. A misplaced decimal, a miscounted delivery, a product logged into the wrong SKU.

These errors compound over time. One wrong unit count on receiving day becomes a mystery six months later when you finally do a physical count.

How to reduce it:

  • Implement a two-step receiving process: one person counts, one person enters
  • Use barcode scanning on receipt instead of manual entry
  • Reconcile receiving documents against purchase orders immediately, not at month-end

2. Employee Theft

According to the National Retail Federation, employee theft accounts for roughly 30% of inventory shrinkage. It's not always malicious — sometimes it's an employee taking a product home to test it with the intention of paying later (but never does).

How to reduce it:

  • Track inventory by bin location so discrepancies can be traced to specific areas
  • Limit access to high-value stock to authorized personnel only
  • Implement random spot checks — the knowledge of accountability deters behavior
  • Have clear, written policies about employee purchases and sample requests

3. Shoplifting and External Theft

For physical retail operations, shoplifting is a constant pressure. Self-checkout has actually increased shrinkage in many stores — the honor system is not always honored.

How to reduce it:

  • Arrange store layout with sightlines to high-value areas
  • Consider RFID tags for high-theft items
  • Train staff on active customer engagement (presence deters theft)
  • Review CCTV footage periodically, not just after an incident

4. Supplier Errors

Your supplier ships 48 units but the packing slip says 50. You don't catch it because receiving is busy. Now your inventory records say you have two more units than you actually do — a phantom that will show up as shrinkage at the next count.

How to reduce it:

  • Count each received shipment against the packing slip before signing
  • Weigh boxes for approximate unit count verification when practical
  • Document and report discrepancies immediately — most suppliers will credit you within 30 days
  • Audit your top 5 suppliers quarterly for fill rate accuracy

5. Damaged and Expired Goods

Product damage during storage, items past their sell-by date, broken packaging — these are inventory you paid for that must be written off.

This is especially painful for businesses with perishable goods, but it affects everyone. A dented box, a torn package, a returned item that can't be resold — it all adds up.

How to reduce it:

  • Implement proper storage rotation: FEFO (First Expired, First Out) for perishables, FIFO (First In, First Out) for non-perishables
  • Designate a damaged goods area and process write-offs weekly, not monthly
  • Track damage rates by product and supplier — recurring issues indicate a receiving or handling problem

6. Poor Inventory Process Management

When procedures are unclear or skipped, shrinkage creeps in. Items get moved from display to backroom without being logged. Returns get reshelved without being scanned. Samples and demos are consumed without documentation.

How to reduce it:

  • Write down every inventory movement procedure and enforce it consistently
  • Use cycle counting instead of annual physical counts — smaller, more frequent checks catch issues early
  • Tag and log all sample, demo, and damaged items separately from sellable stock
  • Make one person accountable for inventory accuracy per location

7. System and Integration Errors

Your POS system says you sold 5 units. Your inventory management system thinks you sold 3. The disconnect? A delayed sync, a misconfigured integration, or a manual override that didn't propagate.

These technical gaps are increasingly common as businesses add multiple sales channels — online store, marketplace, physical retail — each with its own inventory logic.

How to reduce it:

  • Use an inventory system that syncs in real-time, not batch mode
  • Audit your channel connections weekly: check that inventory levels match across all systems
  • Set up low-stock alerts as a secondary check — if an item triggers unexpectedly, it may indicate a sync issue

How to Calculate Your Shrinkage Rate

Shrinkage Rate (%) = (Recorded Inventory - Actual Count) ÷ Recorded Inventory × 100

Example: Your records show €50,000 in inventory. Physical count shows €48,500.

Shrinkage = (50,000 - 48,500) ÷ 50,000 × 100 = 3%

Benchmark: The average retailer runs 1.5-2%. If you're above 3%, you have a problem worth investigating. Above 5% — this is a significant drag on your margins that needs immediate attention.

Build Prevention Into Your Daily Operations

The most effective anti-shrinkage strategy isn't a once-a-year inventory count. It's building small checks into everyday operations:

  • Cycle counting: Count 10-20 SKUs daily instead of 5,000 once a year
  • Receiving audits: Verify every inbound shipment before it enters stock
  • Clear accountability: Every product has a responsible person per location
  • Real-time tracking: Inventory levels update instantly with every sale, return, and transfer

These habits catch shrinkage while it's still a minor discrepancy — before it compounds into a significant financial hit.

Stop wondering where your inventory went. Fluxventory tracks stock in real-time, alerts you to discrepancies, and helps you pinpoint shrinkage patterns by location and product. Start your free trial →

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