Item templates in Business Central
How item templates standardise product creation in Business Central — defaults, categories, and the integration with item attributes.
Items are the most numerous master records in most Business Central tenants. Distributors carry tens of thousands of SKUs; manufacturers configure thousands of components. Item templates are how that scale stays consistent — pre-defined defaults that apply to every new item created from the template, ensuring posting groups, units of measure, and tracking rules are coherent across the catalogue.
The model. An item template carries:
- Type — Inventory, Service, or Non-Inventory.
- Posting groups — General Product, Inventory, VAT Product.
- Costing method — FIFO, LIFO, Average, Standard, Specific.
- Base unit of measure.
- Item tracking code — none, serial, lot, both, with expiration tracking.
- Replenishment system — Purchase, Production, Assembly, Transfer.
- Reordering policy — Lot-for-Lot, Fixed Reorder Qty, Maximum Qty, Order.
- Default dimensions — Department, Cost Centre, Product Line.
- Default location — for inventory placement.
- Tax fields and country codes.
- Custom fields added via extensions.
Templates can be flagged for use in specific scenarios — e.g. a Resale Item template for goods you buy and resell, a Manufactured Item template for items produced in-house, a Service Item template for non-stock services.
Item categories. Beyond templates, item categories form a hierarchical taxonomy that further drives defaults. An item created from a template can be assigned to a category that overrides or supplements the template defaults. Categories also default item attributes — descriptive properties for filtering and search.
The interaction with item attributes. Item attributes (Material, Country of Origin, Brand, Size, etc.) are key-value pairs attached to items. Categories propagate default attributes to all items in the category. Templates can establish baseline attributes for the category. The pattern: template + category + attributes = fully described item with minimal manual entry.
Bulk creation. Combined with Configuration Packages or Excel imports, templates accelerate bulk item creation during migration or product launches. Each row in an import references a template; the template defaults fill in the missing fields.
Common patterns.
- Trade-style distributor — five to ten templates per product family (e.g. Electronics-Stocked, Electronics-Drop-Ship, Clothing-Stocked, Clothing-Promo).
- Manufacturer — templates per item role (Raw Material, Component, Sub-Assembly, Finished Good) with appropriate costing and tracking.
- Service business — Billable Hours, Project Materials, Subscription Service.
Pitfalls.
- Too many templates — every minor variation as a separate template becomes its own maintenance burden. Aim for fewer than 15.
- Out-of-sync templates and category defaults — conflicting defaults confuse the user. Audit.
- Item created without template — manual creation skips the defaults and lands inconsistent data. Train users; consider mandating template use through workflow.
Updating templates. Like customer / vendor templates, changes apply only to new items. To propagate to existing items, use bulk-edit tools on the item list.
Operational discipline. Design templates around how the items are used, not how they're categorised for marketing. The user fills in what the customer-facing context cares about; the template handles the operational defaults the user shouldn't need to think about.
Related guides
- Item attributes and variants in Business CentralHow Business Central handles product variations — variants for stock-keeping, attributes for searching, and where the model fits and where it doesn't.
- Item categories in Business CentralHow to structure a Business Central catalogue with item categories — hierarchy, defaults, attributes, and the integration with templates and reporting.
- Assembly orders in Business CentralHow Business Central handles assembly orders — assembly BOMs, assemble-to-order vs assemble-to-stock, and when to use assembly vs production orders.
- Inventory and warehouse management in Business CentralHow Business Central tracks items, locations, lots, serials, and warehouse operations — from basic stock to directed put-away and pick.
- Inventory costing methods in Business Central, comparedFIFO, LIFO, Average, Standard, and Specific — what each costing method means, and how to choose the right one in Business Central.