Manufacturing businesses don’t always run out of money because they are unprofitable. Many run out because cash leaves faster than cash comes in. That speed is called burn rate—and it is one of the most important signals of survival and growth.
You could have a strong backlog of purchase orders, brand-new machines, and healthy margins on paper. But if cash is draining every month, your business runway—the time you have before you run out of cash—gets shorter and shorter.
Today, many manufacturers face growing material costs, long customer payment terms, and higher labor expenses. These pressures can make burn rate dangerous if you are not watching it closely. The good news: burn rate can be controlled. And with the right actions, you can actually extend your cash runway long enough to grow.
This guide explains what burn rate means in manufacturing, how to measure it, warning signs to watch out for, and practical ways to slow spending while still operating and scaling your production.
Burn rate is how fast your business spends cash each month.
A negative burn rate means cash is going out faster than coming in. Positive means you are gaining cash.
Manufacturers are especially vulnerable because revenue is usually delayed. You produce goods now, but you may collect payments 30, 60, or even 90 days later. That creates a gap many companies struggle to survive.
If you’ve ever felt profitable but still tight on cash, this is why.
Strong inventory management also matters here. Many companies tie up too much cash in raw materials and finished goods. If this sounds familiar, you may want to review how inventory spending affects cash flow, like in this article on How Inventory Carrying Costs Affect Cash Flow in Business.
A straightforward formula many manufacturers use:
Monthly Burn Rate = Monthly Cash Inflow – Monthly Cash Outflow
If the answer is negative, you are burning cash.
Example:
Cash collected: $250,000
Cash spent: $300,000
Burn rate = –$50,000
That means you are losing $50K in cash every month.
Now find runway:
Runway (in months) = Current Cash ÷ Monthly Burn Rate
If you have $300,000 in the bank:
Runway = 300,000 ÷ 50,000 = 6 months
This tells you how long you have before you run out of cash if nothing changes.
This type of forward planning is closely related to cash forecasting, covered more deeply in Effective Cash Flow Strategies Every Manufacturer Needs.
Many manufacturers focus on profit but forget cash timing:
• You may book revenue today but collect it much later
• You may spend cash now on materials and labor
• Inventory sits and delays cash return
• Equipment investments hit cash immediately
That means profit ≠ cash.
And without cash, production cannot continue.
This becomes even more serious if you operate in high-mix, low-volume environments, where small changes in working capital make a big difference. For more insight, see Smart Financial Tips for High Mix Low Volume Production.
Manufacturing burn rate is shaped by a few key forces:
Skilled labor is costly. Overtime and poor scheduling increase the burn, especially when production downtime slows output. This is explained well in Understanding the True Cost of Production Downtime.
Buying too far ahead drains cash early and increases waste and storage costs.
Customers take their time paying, while suppliers want money now. Many companies need cash flow solutions for long payment cycles.
New facilities, new equipment, and new hires speed up spending faster than revenue grows.
If no one is tracking spending daily, burn rate can sneak up on you—something financial controls help prevent.
Each one directly shortens your runway.
Manufacturing owners often feel the pressure before they see it in the books. Some early warning signals include:
• Constant supplier calls asking when payments are coming
• Needing loans to cover payroll
• Delaying maintenance or parts purchases
• Saying “we just need one more big order” every month
• Growing backlog while cash on hand shrinks
• Line managers complaining about material shortages
If these sound familiar, you are likely facing common cash flow challenges.
What’s happening behind the scenes is simple:
The spending pace is no longer sustainable.
You do not have to slash people or shut down machines to lower burn rate. You can increase runway by applying smart financial and operational adjustments.
The most successful manufacturers focus on three levers:
• Offer early-payment discounts
• Shorten credit terms where possible
• Improve collections processes (connect with Accounts Receivable best practices)
Small changes can create big improvements in monthly cash inflow.
• Negotiate extended supplier terms
• Defer non-essential capital purchases
• Reduce rush shipping costs by improving planning
This directly reduces burn.
Some manufacturers find that cost structure changes unlock the biggest results. You can explore this deeper in Comparing Cost Control Strategies to Boost Manufacturing Efficiency.
Reducing burn is rarely about cutting one line item. It is about tuning the whole system.
Forecasting is your early-warning radar. It gives you time to react—before things get urgent.
The best practice for manufacturers is rolling forecasting, which is explained here:
How Rolling Forecasting Gives Manufacturers a Competitive Edge
Good forecasting should show:
• Cash expected in
• Cash expected out
• When peaks and dips happen
• Long-term capital planning needs
• Risk areas (material prices, delays, labor shifts)
This helps you extend runway before you risk missing payroll or vendor payments.
Inventory is often the biggest cash trap.
If your warehouse is full but your bank account is empty, you don’t have a revenue problem—you have an asset conversion problem.
Reducing slow-moving stock is one of the fastest ways to free up cash. You can learn more in Improve Inventory Efficiency Through Cost Optimization.
When inventory moves faster:
• Less cash is stuck on shelves
• Material becomes revenue sooner
• Forecasting becomes easier
This can directly push your runway forward.
Better scheduling means fewer surprises (and surprise costs).
Good production planning reduces downtime, overtime, and scrap—all of which burn cash. Learn more in Capacity & Production Planning in Manufacturing: Labor & Equipment Optimization.
When production flow becomes smoother:
• Labor becomes more productive
• Machines run closer to plan
• Materials arrive when needed
• Shipments go out on time
• Cash comes in faster
Burn rate drops naturally.
Sometimes burn rate happens because prices stayed flat while costs went up.
Manufacturers should review:
• Contribution margin
• Material cost volatility
• Labor burden and overhead
• Freight and logistics changes
Margin plays a big role. If you need a refresher, check Margin Analysis in Manufacturing: Measuring What Really Matters.
Even a small price correction can extend your cash runway by lowering how much you must burn every month to meet demand.
Markets change fast—tariffs, supply shortages, interest rates, and labor trends all raise costs. A strong risk plan helps you prepare for these swings instead of reacting late.
More risk insights:
• Financial Risk Management Plan for Manufacturing Success
• Mitigating Financial Risks When Tariffs Hurt Manufacturing
When risk is controlled, burn rate is less likely to spike unexpectedly.
Not every upgrade helps cash runway. But the right tech can:
• Reduce labor waste
• Improve planning
• Automate reporting
• Lower carrying costs
• Speed up quoting and billing
A great place to start: Automating Manufacturing: How the Right Tech Stack Can Help.
If tech reduces waste, it likely lowers burn rate too.
Manufacturers with a CFO (fractional or full-time) are more likely to detect and fix burn rate issues early. CFOs bring:
• Better financial analysis
• Vendor negotiation support
• Production-driven budgeting
• Stronger cash management practices
• Smarter capital spending plans
Learn what a CFO actually does inside a plant operation here:
What Does a Chief Financial Officer Do in a Manufacturing Company?
You do not have to wait until things get bad to get CFO support. Many owners bring in a fractional CFO to improve runway long before cash grows tight.
If you want to extend your runway, here are three steps to take right now:
Measure your burn rate
Forecast the next 6–12 months of cash activity
Make one positive change that brings cash in faster or slows cash out
Small changes stack into major results.
If you want a deeper review or support with optimization, here is also a good resource:
Addressing Common Cash Flow Challenges with Practical Solutions.
Burn rate isn’t about cutting everything. It’s about creating more time, more flexibility, and more control over your business future.
When you manage burn rate well, you:
• Stop living month-to-month
• Gain stability even in uncertain markets
• Protect your team and operations
• Build a stronger platform for long-term growth
Your business shouldn’t run out of cash before it reaches its potential. A better runway means room to win.