Tool · Manufacturing Planning

BOM Calculator

Calculate the maximum number of finished units you can produce from available components and estimate total material costs.

BOM Production Formula
Max Producible = min(Stock_i / Qty_i) for all components i

Stock_i = Current stock of component i

Qty_i = Quantity of component i needed per finished unit

Product & Components

Components

Component NameQty Per UnitCurrent StockUnit Cost ($)

Add at least one component with a name and quantity per unit above. The calculator will determine the maximum number of finished units you can produce and show the component breakdown. Results update automatically.

Multi-channel inventory

Stop running these numbers by hand.

You just calculated this for a handful of SKUs. Organizely does it across your entire catalog, updates every time an order comes in, and tells you exactly when to act.

  • Automatically tracks every SKU across all your channels
  • AI demand forecasting predicts stockouts before they happen
  • Smart reorder alerts so you never miss a purchase order
  • Real-time sync — no CSV exports or manual data entry

Personalized walkthrough · No long-term contracts

Tool guide · Why use it

What this tool helps you do

  • Calculate maximum producible units from available stock
  • Identify component bottlenecks instantly
  • Estimate total material cost per finished unit
  • Plan component procurement with surplus/deficit analysis
  • Export component breakdown as CSV
FAQ · 05 entries

Frequently asked questions.

01What is a Bill of Materials (BOM)?

A Bill of Materials (BOM) is a comprehensive list of all raw materials, components, and sub-assemblies required to manufacture a finished product. It specifies the quantity of each component needed per unit of the finished product.

02How does the BOM calculator determine max producible units?

The calculator divides the current stock of each component by the quantity needed per unit, then takes the minimum across all components. This bottleneck component limits how many finished units you can produce.

03What is the material cost per finished unit?

Material cost per finished unit is the sum of (quantity per unit × unit cost) for every component in the BOM. It represents the total raw material expense to produce one finished product, excluding labor and overhead.

04How can I reduce component bottlenecks?

Identify which components have the lowest stock-to-requirement ratio using the surplus/deficit column. Prioritize reordering those components or find alternative suppliers with shorter lead times to increase your production capacity.

05Can I export the BOM analysis?

Yes. Click the Export CSV button to download the full component breakdown including quantities needed, stock available, surplus or deficit, and cost contribution for each component.