[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 6]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.472-1]

[Page 513-515]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.472-1  Last-in, first-out inventories.

    (a) Any taxpayer permitted or required to take inventories pursuant 
to the provisions of section 471, and pursuant to the provisions of 
Sec. Sec. 1.471-1 to 1.471-9, inclusive, may elect with respect to 
those goods specified in his application and properly subject to 
inventory to compute his opening and closing inventories in accordance 
with the method provided by section 472, this section, and Sec. 1.472-
2. Under this last-in, first-out (LIFO) inventory method, the taxpayer 
is permitted to treat those goods remaining on hand at the close of the 
taxable year as being:
    (1) Those included in the opening inventory of the taxable year, in 
the order of acquisition and to the extent thereof, and
    (2) Those acquired during the taxable year.


The LIFO inventory method is not dependent upon the character of the 
business in which the taxpayer is engaged, or upon the identity or want 
of identity through commingling of any of the goods on hand, and may be 
adopted by the taxpayer as of the close of any taxable year.
    (b) If the LIFO inventory method is used by a taxpayer who regularly 
and consistently, in a manner similar to hedging on a futures market, 
matches purchases with sales, then firm purchases and sales contracts 
(i.e., those not legally subject to cancellation by either party) 
entered into at fixed prices on or before the date of the inventory may 
be included in purchases or sales, as the case may be, for the purpose 
of determining the cost of goods sold and the resulting profit or loss, 
provided that this practice is regularly and consistently adhered to by 
the taxpayer and provided that, in the opinion of the Commissioner, 
income is clearly reflected thereby.
    (c) A manufacturer or processor who has adopted the LIFO inventory 
method as to a class of goods may elect to have such method apply to the 
raw materials only (including those included in goods in process and in 
finished goods) expressed in terms of appropriate units. If such method 
is adopted, the adjustments are confined to costs of the raw material in 
the inventory and the cost of the raw material in goods in process and 
in finished goods produced by such manufacturer or processor and 
reflected in the inventory. The provisions of this paragraph may be 
illustrated by the following examples:

    Example (1). Assume that the opening inventory had 10 units of raw 
material, 10 units of goods in process, and 10 units of finished goods, 
and that the raw material cost was 6 cents a unit, the processing cost 2 
cents a unit, and overhead cost 1 cent a unit. For the purposes of this 
example, it is assumed that the entire amount of goods in process was 50 
percent processed.

                            Opening Inventory
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                        Goods
                                                Raw       in    Finished
                                             material  process    goods
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Raw material                                    $0.60    $0.60     $0.60
Processing cost                              ........      .10       .20
Overhead                                     ........      .05       .10
------------------------------------------------------------------------


In the closing inventory there are 20 units of raw material, 6 units of 
goods in process, and 8 units of finished goods and the costs were: Raw 
material 10 cents, processing cost 4 cents, and overhead 1 cent.

                            Closing Inventory
                 [Based on cost and prior to adjustment]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                        Goods
                                                Raw       in    Finished
                                             material  process    goods
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Raw material                                    $2.00    $0.60     $0.80
Processing costs                             ........      .12       .32
Overhead                                     ........      .03       .08
                                            -----------
   Total                                         2.00      .75      1.20
------------------------------------------------------------------------

There were 30 units of raw material in the opening inventory and 34 
units in the closing inventory. The adjustment to the closing inventory 
would be as follows:

[[Page 514]]


                      Closing Inventory as Adjusted
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                        Goods
                                                Raw       in    Finished
                                             material  process    goods
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Raw material:
  20 at 6 cents                                 $1.20  .......  ........
  6 at 6 cents                               ........    $0.36  ........
  4 at 6 cents                               ........  .......     $0.24
  4 at 10 cents \1\                          ........  .......       .40
Processing costs                             ........      .12       .32
Overhead                                     ........      .03       .08
                                            -----------
      Total                                      1.20      .51     1.04
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ This excess is subject to determination of price under section
  472(b)(1) and Sec.  1.472-2. If the excess falls in goods in process,
  the same adjustment is applicable.

The only adjustment to the closing inventory is the cost of the raw 
material; the processing costs and overhead cost are not changed.
    Example (2). Assume that the opening inventory had 5 units of raw 
material, 10 units of goods in process, and 20 units of finished goods, 
with the same prices as in example (1), and that the closing inventory 
had 20 units of raw material, 20 units of goods in process, and 10 units 
of finished goods, with raw material costs as in the closing inventory 
in example (1). The adjusted closing inventory would be as follows in so 
far as the raw material is concerned:

Raw material, 20 at 6 cents....................................    $1.20
Goods in process:
  15 at 6 cents................................................      .90
  5 at 10 cents \1\............................................      .50
Finished goods:
  None at 6 cents..............................................     0.00
  10 at 10 cents \1\...........................................     1.00

\1\ This excess is subject to determination of price under section
  472(b)(1) and Sec.  1.472-2.

The 20 units of raw material in the raw state plus 15 units of raw 
material in goods in process make up the 35 units of raw material that 
were contained in the opening inventory.

    (d) For the purposes of this section, raw material in the opening 
inventory must be compared with similar raw material in the closing 
inventory. There may be several types of raw materials, depending upon 
the character, quality, or price, and each type of raw material in the 
opening inventory must be compared with a similar type in the closing 
inventory.
    (e) In the cotton textile industry there may be different raw 
materials depending upon marked differences in length of staple, in 
color or grade of the cotton. But where different staple lengths or 
grades of cotton are being used at different times in the same mill to 
produce the same class of goods, such differences would not necessarily 
require the classification into different raw materials.
    (f) As to the pork packing industry a live hog is considered as 
being composed of various raw materials, different cuts of a hog varying 
markedly in price and use. Generally a hog is processed into 
approximately 10 primal cuts and several miscellaneous articles. 
However, due to similarity in price and use, these may be grouped into 
fewer classifications, each group being classed as one raw material.
    (g) When the finished product contains two or more different raw 
materials as in the case of cotton and rayon mixtures, each raw material 
is treated separately and adjustments made accordingly.
    (h) Upon written notice addressed to the Commissioner of Internal 
Revenue, Attention T:R, Washington, D.C. 20224 by the taxpayer, a 
taxpayer who has heretofore adopted the LIFO inventory method in respect 
of any goods may adopt the method authorized in this section and limit 
the election to the raw material including raw materials entering into 
goods in process and in finished goods. If this method is adopted as to 
any specific goods, it must be used exclusively for such goods for any 
prior taxable year (not closed by agreement) to which the prior election 
applies and for all subsequent taxable years, unless permission to 
change is granted by the Commissioner.
    (i) The election may also be limited to that phase in the 
manufacturing process where a product is produced that is recognized 
generally as a salable product as, for example, in the textile industry 
where one phase of the process is the production of yarn. Since yarn is 
generally recognized as a salable product, the election may be limited 
to that portion of the process when yarn is produced. In the case of 
copper and brass processors, the election may be limited to the 
production of bars, plates, sheets, etc., although these may be further 
processed into other products.
    (j) The election may also apply to any one raw material, when two or 
more raw materials enter into the composition of the finished product; 
for example, in the case of cotton and rayon

[[Page 515]]

yarn, the taxpayer may elect to inventory the cotton only. However, a 
taxpayer who has previously made an election to use the LIFO inventory 
method may not later elect to exclude any raw materials that were 
covered by such previous election.
    (k) If a taxpayer using the retail method of pricing inventories, 
authorized by Sec. 1.471-8, elects to use in connection therewith the 
LIFO inventory method authorized by section 472 and this section, the 
apparent cost of the goods on hand at the end of the year, determined 
pursuant to Sec. 1.471-8, shall be adjusted to the extent of price 
changes therein taking place after the close of the preceding taxable 
year. The amount of any apparent inventory increase or decrease to be 
eliminated in this adjustment shall be determined by reference to 
acceptable price indexes established to the satisfaction of the 
Commissioner. Price indexes prepared by the United States Bureau of 
Labor Statistics which are applicable to the goods in question will be 
considered acceptable to the Commissioner. Price indexes which are based 
upon inadequate records, or which are not subject to complete and 
detailed audit within the Internal Revenue Service, will not be 
approved.
    (l) If a taxpayer uses consistently the so-called ``dollar-value'' 
method of pricing inventories, or any other method of computation 
established to the satisfaction of the Commissioner as reasonably 
adaptable to the purpose and intent of section 472 and this section, and 
if such taxpayer elects under section 472 to use the LIFO inventory 
method authorized by such section, the taxpayer's opening and closing 
inventories shall be determined under section 472 by the use of the 
appropriate adaptation. See Sec. 1.472-8 for rules relating to the use 
of the dollar-value method.

[T.D. 6500, 25 FR 11727, Nov. 26, 1960, as amended by T.D. 6539, 26 FR 
518, Jan. 20, 1961]