Cost of Poor Quality (COPQ) is a key concept in Lean Six Sigma. It reveals how much money is lost due to waste, rework, and inefficiencies. Every defect, delay, or deviation adds cost. These costs often go unnoticed but quietly erode profits and customer trust.
COPQ provides a clear way to measure the hidden costs of poor performance. It also helps prioritize improvement projects. By understanding COPQ, organizations can make better decisions, cut waste, and improve quality.
Let’s explore what COPQ means, why it matters, how to calculate it, and how to use it in Lean Six Sigma projects.
- What Is COPQ?
- Why COPQ Matters in Lean Six Sigma
- The Hidden Nature of COPQ
- How to Calculate COPQ
- COPQ and DMAIC
- Examples of COPQ Across Industries
- Prevention vs. Detection Costs
- Visualizing COPQ with the Quality Iceberg
- Reducing COPQ: Strategies That Work
- COPQ and Voice of the Customer
- COPQ in Financial Justification
- Pro Tip: Always Quantify
- Challenges in Measuring COPQ
- Summary: Why COPQ Is Essential in Lean Six Sigma
- Conclusion
What Is COPQ?
COPQ stands for Cost of Poor Quality. It refers to all the costs that would disappear if systems, processes, and products were perfect. These include costs from:
- Internal failures (e.g., rework)
- External failures (e.g., warranty claims)
- Appraisal (e.g., inspections)
- Prevention (e.g., training and audits)

COPQ shows the financial impact of failing to do things right the first time.
The Four Categories of COPQ
Lean Six Sigma splits cost of poor quality into four main categories:
| Category | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Internal Failure | Costs from defects found before reaching the customer | Rework, scrap, re-inspection |
| External Failure | Costs from defects found by the customer | Returns, complaints, warranty costs |
| Appraisal | Costs of checking quality to find defects | Inspection, testing, audits |
| Prevention | Costs to prevent defects from happening | Training, process control, quality planning |
These categories help break down where the money goes. Each offers insights into how to fix root causes.
Why COPQ Matters in Lean Six Sigma
Lean Six Sigma aims to eliminate waste and defects. COPQ supports this by putting a dollar value on poor quality. It turns vague quality issues into measurable costs.
Benefits of Using COPQ
- Drives Accountability: It shows managers and teams where quality failures cost money.
- Supports Prioritization: It helps rank improvement projects by financial impact.
- Improves ROI of Six Sigma Projects: It makes benefits easier to justify and quantify.
- Encourages Prevention: It shifts focus from fixing to preventing problems.
Let’s look at an example.
Example: Manufacturing Case
A textile plant found it was spending:
- $50,000/month on rework
- $30,000/month on returned product replacements
- $20,000/month on inspections
- $10,000/month on quality training
This meant COPQ = $110,000/month.
After a Lean Six Sigma project cut rework by 60% and returns by 50%, COPQ dropped to $60,000/month. That’s a $50,000 monthly savings.
The Hidden Nature of COPQ
Most companies underestimate their COPQ. Some industry studies show COPQ can range from 5% to 30% of total revenue. But much of it stays hidden in overhead.
Common Sources of Hidden COPQ
| Source | Example |
|---|---|
| Excessive inventory | Stockpiling due to process variation |
| Overproduction | Making extra to account for defects |
| Downtime | Equipment stops due to poor maintenance |
| Customer dissatisfaction | Lost repeat sales or negative reviews |
| Employee frustration | Low morale from constant rework |
Finding and quantifying these hidden costs takes effort. But it reveals massive opportunities.
How to Calculate COPQ
Calculating COPQ doesn’t require perfection. Start simple. Focus on major cost drivers, then expand over time.
Step 1: Identify Process Failures
Map the process. Use tools like value stream maps or SIPOC diagrams. Look for:
- Rework loops
- Inspection steps
- Customer complaints
- Delays
Step 2: Categorize the Costs
Place each cost into one of the four COPQ categories.
| Cost Item | Category | Amount ($) |
|---|---|---|
| Returned units | External Failure | $15,000 |
| Re-inspections | Appraisal | $5,000 |
| Training program | Prevention | $7,000 |
| Scrap parts | Internal Failure | $10,000 |
Step 3: Add Up the Costs
Add the values to find total COPQ.
Total COPQ = Internal + External + Appraisal + Prevention
In this case:
Total COPQ = $10,000 + $15,000 + $5,000 + $7,000 = $37,000
This number helps justify a Lean Six Sigma project to reduce those costs.
COPQ and DMAIC
COPQ fits naturally into the DMAIC framework of Lean Six Sigma.
| DMAIC Phase | COPQ Role |
|---|---|
| Define | Quantify COPQ to create urgency and focus the problem statement |
| Measure | Break down COPQ by category and process area |
| Analyze | Link costs to root causes of defects or delays |
| Improve | Target high-cost areas with countermeasures |
| Control | Track COPQ after changes to sustain savings |
Let’s apply it.
Example: Using COPQ in DMAIC – Assembly Line Defects
Define: The company faces high internal failures—$40,000/month in rework.
Measure: Rework stems from misaligned components and poor soldering.
| Source | Cost ($) |
|---|---|
| Component misalign | $25,000 |
| Poor soldering | $15,000 |
Analyze: Root cause analysis shows lack of training and outdated fixtures.
Improve: Team updates fixtures and retrains staff. New procedures are implemented.
Control: COPQ drops to $10,000/month. Savings = $30,000/month.
Examples of COPQ Across Industries
| Industry | Example of Poor Quality | Estimated COPQ Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare | Incorrect patient records | Legal costs, patient harm |
| Automotive | Faulty brakes recalled | Repairs, lost brand trust |
| Electronics | Defective circuit boards | Scrap and warranty costs |
| Food & Beverage | Contaminated batch | Waste, recalls, lawsuits |
| Software | Buggy releases and downtime | Customer churn, tech support |
Every industry faces COPQ. Lean Six Sigma offers the tools to reduce it.
Prevention vs. Detection Costs
Investing in prevention costs less than fixing problems later. Prevention costs are proactive. Appraisal and failure costs are reactive.
| Type | Cost Range | When It Occurs |
|---|---|---|
| Prevention | Lowest | Before production |
| Appraisal | Medium | During production |
| Internal Failure | High | Before delivery |
| External Failure | Highest | After delivery |
The earlier you catch a problem, the cheaper it is to fix.
Visualizing COPQ with the Quality Iceberg
Think of COPQ like an iceberg. Only a small part is visible. Most costs hide below the surface.

Use tools like process maps, FMEA, and root cause analysis to uncover the full iceberg.
Reducing COPQ: Strategies That Work
Here are proven methods to lower the cost of poor quality:
1. Implement Error-Proofing (Poka-Yoke)
Design processes that prevent mistakes. Use sensors, interlocks, and fixtures to catch errors.
Example: A sensor stops a packaging machine if a label is missing.
2. Standardize Work
Create clear instructions for every step. This reduces variation and mistakes.
3. Improve Training
Ensure employees know the standard, not just the task. Train them on why quality matters.
4. Automate Inspections
Use vision systems or test rigs to automate quality checks. This improves accuracy and speed.
5. Use Visual Management
Make problems easy to spot. Use color coding, dashboards, Andon, and alerts.
COPQ and Voice of the Customer
Poor quality damages the customer experience. COPQ should be linked to Voice of the Customer (VOC) data.
| VOC Complaint | COPQ Trigger | Example Cost |
|---|---|---|
| “Product arrived broken” | Packaging defect | $10,000 in returns |
| “Too slow to ship” | Delays in fulfillment | $5,000 in lost orders |
| “Hard to use” | Poor design | $15,000 in support calls |
By combining VOC and COPQ, you can identify which failures hurt customers the most—and fix them first.
COPQ in Financial Justification
COPQ makes Six Sigma projects easier to justify to finance teams. Hard cost savings win support.
Example: Project Financial Case
Project Goal: Reduce rework on coating line
Current COPQ: $20,000/month
Target Reduction: 75%
Projected Savings: $15,000/month or $180,000/year
Investment: $25,000 for training and tooling
Payback Period: 2 months
That’s an easy “yes” for decision-makers.
Pro Tip: Always Quantify
When scoping a Lean Six Sigma project, always ask:
- What is the current COPQ?
- What % reduction is possible?
- What are the financial gains?
Include these numbers in your project charter. It builds credibility and urgency.
Challenges in Measuring COPQ
COPQ measurement is powerful, but not easy. Watch out for these challenges:
| Challenge | Solution |
|---|---|
| Incomplete data | Start with estimates, improve over time |
| Resistance from teams | Show the benefit of fixing—not blaming |
| Costs spread across systems | Use process maps to trace the sources |
| Hard-to-quantify impacts | Use VOC and customer churn data as indicators |
Start small, grow confidence, and refine the approach over time.
Summary: Why COPQ Is Essential in Lean Six Sigma
COPQ connects quality problems to financial outcomes. It shines a light on waste, inefficiency, and rework. It helps teams focus on what matters most.
By understanding and reducing COPQ, organizations can:
- Improve customer satisfaction
- Lower operating costs
- Increase productivity
- Justify Lean Six Sigma efforts
Conclusion
The cost of poor quality drains resources every day. But most leaders don’t realize how much it’s costing them. COPQ turns invisible waste into visible opportunity.
Lean Six Sigma provides the framework. COPQ adds the financial lens. Together, they build a business case for change.
So, start tracking COPQ in your processes. Use it to prioritize your projects. Then reduce it with disciplined problem-solving. Your customers, your teams, and your bottom line will thank you.




