BOM levels

Completed

A single-level BOM consists of the immediately subordinate components that are necessary to build the product. It doesn't contain the "components of the components."

When a BOM contains another BOM as its component, it's known as a multilevel BOM, where the sub-BOM is referred to as level one and its components as level two. BOMs can consist of as many levels as necessary, depending on the type of product being produced.

Product information management > Bills of materials and formulas > Bill of materials > (Select product) > Maintain > Designer

Screenshot  of the BOM designer  page showing a multilevel BOM.

Example of a multilevel BOM

Adult bicycles consist of two wheels, a seat, handlebars, and a frame. All these components are reflected in the bicycle BOM. However, the frame also consists of several discrete items (three or four tubes welded together). Therefore, the frame has a BOM of its own. The frame's BOM is known as a sub-BOM, that is, a bill of material within the bill of material for the end product, the bicycle.

Assume that a BOM is created to assemble bicycles. The following items are set up as the product type. The products types are used in the BOM and don't require assembly.

  • Wheels
  • Seat
  • Handlebars

The bicycle frame is assembled in production. This part of the process is set up as a sub-BOM that includes the following items:

  • Tubes
  • Welding wire
  • Brackets or brace

Diagram of the example of a  bicycle assembly BOM.

Complex BOM items frequently have several sub-BOMs. The number of levels, or sub-BOMs, depends on how the item is managed.

Generally, an item needs its own level in the BOM if, at a stage, the item must be:

  • Tracked
  • Stored
  • Sold