Evaluate incoming materials with yield rates and defect counts. Track reject losses before release decisions. Improve supplier decisions using clear inspection metrics every day.
Incoming Yield Rate (%) = (Accepted Units / Total Units Received) x 100
First Pass Yield (%) = ((Accepted Units - Reworked Units) / Total Units Received) x 100
Reject Rate (%) = (Rejected Units / Total Units Received) x 100
Defect Unit Rate (%) = (Defect Units / Total Units Received) x 100
DPO = Total Defects / (Total Units Received x Opportunities per Unit)
DPMO = DPO x 1,000,000
Inspection Cost per Accepted Unit = Inspection Cost / Accepted Units
Estimated Cost of Rejects = Rejected Units x Cost per Rejected Unit
| Total Units Received | Accepted Units | Rejected Units | Reworked Units | Defect Units | Total Defects | Opportunities per Unit | Inspection Cost | Cost per Rejected Unit | Target Yield Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10,000 | 9,680 | 320 | 140 | 280 | 410 | 6 | $1,200 | $18 | 97.5% |
| 5,400 | 5,118 | 282 | 90 | 210 | 298 | 4 | $860 | $11 | 96.0% |
Incoming yield rate shows how much received material becomes immediately acceptable for production. It helps teams compare suppliers, improve receiving inspection plans, estimate nonconformance costs, and spot recurring quality drift before defects affect downstream operations. When used with reject rate, DPMO, and rework recovery, the metric becomes a strong indicator of supplier stability and inspection efficiency.
It measures the share of received units that pass incoming inspection and become acceptable for use. Higher values usually indicate stronger supplier quality and lower receiving losses.
Incoming yield uses final accepted units. First pass yield excludes reworked units, so it reveals how many units passed without corrective effort during receiving inspection.
Yield shows overall acceptance, while DPMO shows defect intensity relative to opportunities. Together they help distinguish small volumes of severe defects from broad but lighter nonconformance patterns.
They may count in final acceptance if they become usable. However, tracking them separately is important because heavy rework can hide poor initial quality and consume inspection resources.
The answer depends on product criticality and supplier agreements. Many teams target at least 97% to 99%, but regulated or high-risk products may require tighter thresholds.
Yes. You can compare lots, monitor trends, and combine yield with reject cost, DPMO, and rework recovery to create a more complete supplier performance view.
Cost fields turn quality data into financial impact. This makes it easier to justify supplier improvement actions, tighter controls, or better receiving inspection strategies.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.