A “good” under UCC Article 2 is any tangible, movable item that can be identified and moved at the time of the contract for sale, such as a car, a refrigerator, or a commercial freezer unit, but not money, stocks, bonds, real estate, or services.

Core definition under Article 2

Article 2 defines “goods” as all things that are movable at the time they are identified to the contract for sale, excluding:

  • The money in which the price is paid.
  • Investment securities like stocks and bonds.
  • Intangible rights (things in action), such as contractual rights or accounts receivable.

Goods do include ordinary personal property items: furniture, vehicles, equipment, electronics, and inventory.

Special inclusions and exclusions

Included as “goods”:

  • Specially manufactured items that are movable when identified (e.g., custom machinery).
  • Unborn young of animals and growing crops.
  • Certain things attached to real estate that can be severed (like timber, stone, or crops).

Excluded from “goods”:

  • Real estate and buildings attached to land.
  • Pure services (like consulting, medical, or legal services).
  • Intangible financial assets (stocks, bonds, other investment securities).

What that means for “which of the following…”

Because your question sounds like a multiple‑choice item, the correct answer choice will be the one that is:

  • Tangible and movable at the time of the contract (for example: “a commercial freezer unit,” “a shipment of computers,” “a car”).
  • Not money itself, not a stock or bond, and not land or a building, and not a pure service.

So, if the options looked like this:

  • Stocks
  • A parcel of land
  • A consulting contract
  • A commercial freezer unit

…the item that qualifies as a “good” under UCC Article 2 would be the commercial freezer unit , because it is tangible, movable personal property.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.