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Cost Classification

Classification of Costs 🗂️

Understanding the classification of costs is essential for effective management and decision-making within any organization. Costs can be classified based on various criteria, such as their relation to a product, variability, relation to manufacturing departments, nature, relation to an accounting period, and their relevance to decision-making. Each classification serves a specific purpose, aiding in analysis, reporting, and strategy.


According to Relation to a Product

Manufacturing Costs

  • Direct Materials: Materials that directly become part of the finished product and can be easily traced and attributed to it.
  • Direct Labor: Labor costs directly involved in the production of goods that can be traced to specific products.
  • Factory Overhead: All manufacturing costs that are not direct materials or direct labor. This includes indirect materials (e.g., lubricants) and indirect labor (e.g., maintenance staff) that support the production process.

Non-manufacturing Costs

  • Marketing or Selling Expense: Costs associated with securing customer orders and delivering the product. This includes advertising, sales salaries, and distribution costs.
  • Administrative Expense: Costs related to executive, organizational, and clerical functions, such as office salaries and legal fees.

According to Variability 📈

  • Variable Costs: Costs that vary in total directly with the level of production or sales volume.
  • Fixed Costs: Costs that remain constant in total regardless of changes in production or sales volume.
  • Mixed Costs: Costs that have both fixed and variable components, like a utility bill with a fixed service charge plus usage charges.

According to Relation to Manufacturing Departments

  • Direct Department Charges: Costs that are directly charged to a specific manufacturing department.
  • Indirect Department Charges: Costs incurred by one department but allocated to others because they benefit multiple departments.

According to Nature as Common or Joint

  • Common Costs: Costs of facilities or services that are shared by multiple operations or commodities.
  • Joint Costs: Costs incurred in a single process that simultaneously produces two or more products.

According to Relation to an Accounting Period

  • Capital Expenditures: Expenditures that benefit more than one accounting period and are recorded as assets.
  • Revenue Expenditures: Expenditures that benefit only the current period and are treated as expenses.

For Decision-Making 🧠

  • Standard Costs: Predetermined costs used as a benchmark for evaluating performance.
  • Opportunity Costs: The potential benefit lost when one alternative is selected over another.
  • Differential Costs: The difference in cost between two decision alternatives.
  • Relevant Costs: Future costs that differ between decision-making alternatives.
  • Out-of-Pocket Costs: Costs that require a current or future outlay of cash.
  • Sunk Costs: Costs that have already been incurred and cannot be recovered or changed by any future decision.