MRO stands for Maintenance, Repair, and Operations — the consumable supplies, spare parts, and tools a business needs to keep running, but that don't end up in the products it sells. The lubricants on a CNC machine, the gloves in a packing station, the toner in the office printer — all MRO. It's the inventory category that quietly bleeds money because nobody's paying attention to it.
MRO is everything you buy to operate the business, as opposed to everything you buy to make the product. A bottling plant's glass bottles are direct materials (they're in the product). Its conveyor belt grease, replacement bearings, safety goggles, and forklift batteries are MRO (they're in the building, not the product).
A typical MRO list at a mid-sized warehouse looks like this:
Individually small. Collectively, MRO is often 5–15% of a manufacturer's operating spend, and most companies have no idea how much they actually own.
MRO breaks into a few rough buckets:
The dividing line is simple: does it go into the product the customer buys? If yes, it's direct materials. If no — even if it's critical to making the product — it's MRO.
People conflate these constantly, especially in smaller operations where one person handles both.
| Direct Materials | MRO | |
|---|---|---|
| Ends up in the finished product? | Yes | No |
| Tracked on the BOM? | Yes | Usually no |
| Cost allocation | Cost of goods sold | Operating expense |
| Reorder pattern | Demand-driven, forecasted | Usage-driven, sporadic |
| Ownership | Production / planning | Operations / facilities |
Direct materials get the spotlight. They're on the BOM, the production plan, the cost sheet. MRO sits in a back room labeled "the cage" or "the storeroom" and gets bought through reactive purchase orders when something runs out — or worse, when something breaks.
Three reasons it slips through the cracks:
The combined effect: companies discover they have $50,000 of duplicate spare parts spread across three storerooms, expiring PPE in unmarked bins, and a "missing" calibration tool that's been on someone's desk for two years.
You don't need an enterprise CMMS to fix this. Three moves get most of the value:
You'll know it's working when the maintenance team stops driving to the supply store at 7 a.m.
StockZip handles MRO inventory the same way it handles product inventory — SKU, bin, photo, reorder point. The check-in / check-out flow logs who took the last set of gloves and when, so the storeroom stops being a guessing game. Set up your MRO storeroom.
Straight answers about spreadsheets, scanners, offline work, existing systems, and the free period.
Maintenance, Repair, and Operations. It refers to the supplies, spare parts, and tools used to keep a business running — distinct from raw materials that go into the products the business sells.