Reorder Point (ROP): how to calculate, formula and real examples

The point of reorder (ROP) is the inventory level that indicates when to place a new order to avoid running out of stock. It is also known as a point of order or point of replenishment.

In this step-by-step guide, we are going to analyze? How to calculate a reorder point? What is the formula for calculating ROP? with real examples that we have seen in Datup so you can calculate it in minutes with your company data.

If your company bills more than USD10 million a year, instead of calculating the reorder point manually, you can do it with a integrated platform that helps you calculate the reorder point and manage: demand, purchases and inventory in one place.

Now, let's see what it is and how to calculate the reorder point.

What is the point of reorder or order (ROP)?

The point of reorder (ROP) is the amount of inventory they should be in so they can order more product before they run out of stock while waiting for the new order to arrive.

If the reorder point of my product A is 180, this means that when my inventory is 180 units, that's when I need to place another order to avoid being out of stock, while the new product arrives.

Therefore, the reorder point must be calculated for each product in your portfolio, because different products behave differently.

What is the reorder point (ROP) formula?

The reorder point (ROP) formula is as follows:

Reorder point = (average sales per day x Lead time in days) + Safety stock

This formula allows you to calculate the minimum value you need to have to avoid running out of stock and losing sales due to lack of product.

Formula de punto de reorden
Reorder point formula

However, there are factors that you don't control and that affect your reorder point, such as: demand and leadtimes or supplier delivery times.

Therefore, we recommend that you use a demand and inventory planning software that can calculate these values for you automatically taking into account all the historical values of the variables you don't control and external factors that affect demand such as holidays, weather and inflation.

How to calculate the reorder point?

We have already seen what the reorder point is and what the formula is. But every element of the formula such as average sales per day or lead times (delivery times) and safety stock, so let's look at each one.

Calculation of average sales per day

The first thing we need is to know how many units of product you sell on average per day.

To calculate the average daily sales and review how many units were sold over a period, such as a 30-day month. Then, divide this total number of units sold by the number of days in the period to get the average daily sales.

Average sales calculation = Total product sales/ Number of days

Average sales calculation: 800 units sold/30 days = 26.6 which we rounded up to 27

In this case, we sell 27 units of product per day.

Calculation of lead time or delivery time

The lead time or delivery time is the number of days that pass from an order to a supplier until the product is delivered to you. This may vary by supplier, so it's important that you take the real historical value and not the traded one for greater accuracy.

To calculate lead time, take the average time of several time periods for greater accuracy.

Lead time = Average (days from when the order is placed until the product is delivered)

Lead Time Calculation: Average (15 + 16 + 20)/3 = 17 days

In this case our average lead time is 17 because we take the average lead times of the last 3 orders.

Safety stock calculation

Safety stock is the 'extra' inventory you have in case there is a variation in demand or in the supply chain process itself.

Safety Stock = (Maximum Daily Orders x Maximum Lead Time Value) — (Average of Average Orders x Average Lead Time)

Safety stock = (35 x 20) — (27 x 17) = 700 — 459 = 241 units

This is interpreted as meaning that we must have 241 units of reserve product inventory, in case there is a variation in demand or production.

Practical example of calculating the point of order or reorder (ROP)

Now with the previously calculated values for calculating average sales per day, lead time and safety stock, we can apply the order or reorder calculation formula.

Reorder point = (average sales per day x Lead time in days) + Safety stock

Reorder point = (27 x 17) + 241 = 700 product units

This means that when I have 700 units of inventory, that's when I must place the replacement order to guarantee that I will have the product available.

Example of reorder point calculation
Example calculation of the reorder point

Remember that you should always use the same time units, in this case we calculate daily demand and delivery times in days.

Are there tools or software to calculate the Reorder Point?

Yes, there are several tools that allow this to be done. The important thing to consider is to have a tool that allows you to have full visibility: demand forecasting, inventory management and portfolio classification as Datup.

Because if you have all the information broken down into different tools and reports, you're not going to save time, or allow the team to work in one direction.

Companies such as Juan Valdez and Dersa Calculate reorder points dynamically, taking into account all the variables involved, with updated data and without the need to manually join them into spreadsheets.

They can achieve this thanks to the fact that Datup automatically integrates with all their data sources such as their ERP and WMS to bring this information in an integrated way.

Software de punto de reorden
Reorder point software

This allows them to reduce errors, save time and make this process more efficient.

Why is it important to calculate the Reorder Point?

If you don't calculate the reorder point per product correctly, you run the risk of:

  • Running out of product and losing sales
  • Having excess product and increasing costs
  • Excess working capital

Therefore, keeping the calculation of the reorder point up to date allows you to:

  1. Avoid obsolete inventory or out of stock by knowing the exact time to stock up
  2. Replenish your points of sale at the exact time, taking into account all the variables of the business
  3. Timely delivery to your customers avoiding loss of sales

When should the Reorder Point be reviewed and adjusted?

There are three key moments you should monitor to update your reorder points:

When you have low effectiveness

You should check the reorder point on products where you have excess inventory or out of stock products because this could indicate that you are underestimating or overestimating some of the variables (demand, leadtimes and safety stock).

At Datup, we calculate the standard deviation and forecasting accuracy of demand and other important indicators such as the reorder point, which are automatically adjusted with artificial intelligence.

When there are variations in demand

If there is variation in demand due to changes in seasonality, market trends, social, political factors or promotional campaigns, it is necessary to adjust the reorder point to reflect the new expected demand.

When there are changes in delivery times

Delivery times may decrease, which is good, due to improvements in supply chain efficiency, change of suppliers, etc.

But it can increase due to logistical problems, social factors such as holidays or strikes or climate changes.

What is the difference between security stock and point of order?

The main difference between the safety stock and the point of reorder is that safety stocks protect against unexpected fluctuations, while the point of order ensures a constant flow of products by issuing orders at strategic times.

Some teams calculate the reorder point without safety stock and only using expected demand and supplier times, although this is very risky because demand may vary and the supplier may have problems or fail.

Limitations and factors to consider when calculating the reorder point

In our experience, we have seen that the main limitation has to do with the fact that you are assuming scenarios with little uncertainty calculated manually in a spreadsheet.

  1. It depends on accurate and up-to-date data.
  2. It does not consider the variability in demand.
  3. Ignore the uncertainty in delivery times.
  4. It doesn't account for changes in demand or costs.
  5. It does not consider the obsolescence of the inventory.

This is fine if you're a small company, but if you have to handle hundreds of products and place hundreds or thousands of orders monthly and you've exceeded the $800,000 monthly threshold, you'd better have a integrated software for planning demand and inventories.

If you're going to calculate it manually, it's best to have an excel that feeds on the most up-to-date data on your business and allows you to have the best possible accuracy.

How to calculate the reorder point in 4 steps

In short, you can calculate the reorder point by doing the following:

  1. Calculate the average sales per day of the product you want to calculate
  2. Analyze the supplier's average delivery time for that product in days
  3. Define your safety stock by product
  4. Apply the formula: (average sales per day x Lead time in days) + Safety stock
Reorder Point (ROP): how to calculate, formula and real examples

Felipe Hernández

Demand forecasting and inventory optimization with AI for supply chain teams.

Keep learning about Supply Chain Analytics

Supply chain analytics, what is it and how is it used?

Find out what supply chain analysis is and how it can help optimize processes, reduce costs and improve decision-making

Supply Chain Rankings

Rankings or classifications make it possible to identify groups of SKUs that behave in a similar way according to different segmentation criteria.

What are Demand Driven and S&OP?

Learn how Demand Driven and S&OP synchronize your supply chain, reduce costs and improve customer satisfaction with AI and effective planning.

How to forecast demand in Supply Chain correctly

Learn how to make an accurate demand forecast with our guide. Improve planning, reduce costs and optimize your inventories.

Supply Chain and Digital Transformation Trends 2025

Discover the trends in supply chains 2025: analysis of 167 LATAM companies on digitalization, demand forecasting and more.

How to estimate sales of a new product?

Learn how to estimate sales for a new product using data-driven methods, market analysis, and demand forecasting.
Supply Chain Analytics
Datup integrates your data and uses deep learning to predict demand (95%+ accuracy), analyze your inventory, and calculate reorder points, prioritizing your purchases based on location and strategic products.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Untitled UI logotextLogo
© 2025, Datup.