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Economic Order Quantity Kalkulators

Detailed Guide Coming Soon

We're working on a comprehensive educational guide for the Economic Order Quantity Kalkulators. Check back soon for step-by-step explanations, formulas, real-world examples, and expert tips.

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Pro Tip

The EOQ cost curve is surprisingly flat near the optimum — ordering 20% more or less than EOQ costs only 2–3% more than the optimal. This flatness means you have flexibility to round EOQ to practical quantities (pallet multiples, container minimums) without meaningful cost penalty. Use EOQ to set your ordering range, then choose the most operationally convenient quantity within ±25% of EOQ.

Difficulty:Intermediate

Did you know?

Ford Whitman Harris derived the EOQ formula in 1913 while working as a production engineer at Westinghouse. He published it in a single page in Factory magazine — one of the most cited papers in operations management history. Remarkably, the formula went largely uncredited for decades because Harris never received academic recognition; it was R.H. Wilson's 1934 application paper that made 'Wilson's formula' the popular name for Harris's discovery.

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Reviewed May 2026
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