Barcode Inventory for Small Business: The Setup That Actually Works

June 17, 2026 · 6 min read

My first month running inbound at an Amazon fulfillment center, I processed roughly 50,000 units a day. Every single one had a barcode. If a barcode didn't scan — wrong format, poor print quality, label peeling off — that unit went to a problem-solve queue that cost the seller money and time. I spent five years watching inventory flow through that building, and I learned exactly where barcode systems fail.

When I left Amazon and started consulting for small e-commerce businesses, I saw the same problems at a smaller scale — but with much higher stakes. Amazon can absorb a few rejected units. A small business with 300 SKUs in a garage can't afford to lose track of 12 of them. Here's what I recommend for getting a barcode system running without spending thousands or overcomplicating it.

Start Here: What Are You Actually Tracking?

Before buying anything, I tell every client to answer three questions:

I once consulted for a candle maker who thought she needed a full WMS. Turned out she had 18 SKUs and shipped from her living room. A $25 Bluetooth scanner and a free app was all she needed. Don't buy a system for the business you might have in three years — buy for the one you have now.

The $200 Setup That Works for Most Small Businesses

Here's the stack I recommend for a business with 50-500 SKUs:

1. Barcode Labels — $30-60

Use thermal labels, not inkjet. Inkjet barcodes smudge when they get wet, and in a warehouse or stockroom, things get wet. I've rejected pallets at Amazon because the barcodes were inkjet-printed on paper and the humidity made them unreadable. For indoor use, direct thermal labels are fine. For anything that sits in sunlight (retail shelf, outdoor market), get thermal transfer.

Generate your barcodes for free — I use GenBarcode for labels and they print fine on standard 1"×2-5/8" address labels if you're just starting out.

2. Scanner — $25-120

A used Symbol/Motorola LS2208 from eBay runs about $30 and will outlast three Bluetooth scanners. I found one at a warehouse liquidation that was manufactured in 2012 and still scans faster than any phone camera. If you need wireless, the NADAMOO Bluetooth scanner on Amazon is ~$60 and works out of the box — it emulates a keyboard, so any spreadsheet or web form can receive scans.

3. Software — Free to $50/month

If you're under 100 SKUs: Google Sheets with a barcode column. Seriously. Scan a UPC into column A and use VLOOKUP to pull the product name. I set this up for a vintage clothing seller and it took 45 minutes.

If you're 100-500 SKUs: Zoho Inventory has a free tier that supports barcode scanning. I prefer it over Sortly because Zoho handles purchase orders, which you'll want within your first year.

Over 500 SKUs: You're in Fishbowl or Cin7 territory. Different conversation.

The One Rule I Enforce on Every Setup

Every unique item gets exactly one barcode. Not two. Not "one for the shelf and one for the box." I've seen businesses create parallel numbering systems — "we use SKU codes internally but UPC for FBA" — and then spend hours every week reconciling the two. Pick one number, put it on everything. If a product already has a manufacturer barcode (UPC), use it. If it doesn't, generate one.

Real numbers: The candle maker I mentioned cut her monthly inventory reconciliation from 4 hours to 20 minutes by switching from handwritten counts to a $25 scanner + Google Sheets. Her error rate dropped from "I think we shipped 47?" to zero discrepancies in six months. Total investment: $55.

When to Upgrade From the Spreadsheet

I tell clients to upgrade when one of these happens:

  1. You have a stockout you didn't see coming. If you ran out of a top seller because the spreadsheet said 15 but the shelf said 0, you need software with reorder points.
  2. Two people need to access inventory at once. Google Sheets handles this until someone forgets to save and you have version conflicts.
  3. You're spending more than 2 hours a week on counts. At that point, software pays for itself in labor saved.

Don't overthink it. The worst inventory system is the one you buy but never fully set up because it was too complex. I've seen $300/month software sitting unused while a business runs on WhatsApp messages and memory. Start simple. Add complexity when the pain of not having it exceeds the pain of setting it up.

Marcus Rivera Written by Marcus Rivera — Former Amazon warehouse ops manager. I spent 5 years processing millions of units through barcode-driven inventory systems. Now I help small businesses avoid the mistakes that cost Amazon sellers thousands in rejected shipments. More about me →