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What is the Overhead Recovery Rate?
The Overhead Recovery Rate (also known as the Overhead Absorption Rate or Pre-determined Overhead Rate) is a calculation used in cost accounting to allocate indirect costs to specific products, services, or jobs. Unlike direct costs (like raw materials), overhead costs cannot be traced directly to a single unit of output.
Calculating this rate allows businesses to accurately price their products by ensuring that all indirect expenses—such as rent, utilities, and administrative salaries—are covered by the revenue generated from production activities.
How to Calculate Overhead Recovery Rate
The formula for the Overhead Recovery Rate is straightforward, though selecting the correct allocation base is critical for accuracy.
Overhead Recovery Rate = Total Estimated Overhead Costs / Total Estimated Allocation Base
Understanding Allocation Bases
The "Allocation Base" is the driver used to distribute the overhead costs. Common bases include:
- Direct Labor Hours: Used when labor is the primary driver of production. The rate is expressed as "dollars per labor hour."
- Machine Hours: Used in highly automated manufacturing environments. The rate is expressed as "dollars per machine hour."
- Direct Labor Cost: Expressed as a percentage of the wages paid to direct labor.
- Direct Material Cost: Expressed as a percentage of the raw material costs.
Calculation Example
Imagine a furniture manufacturing shop that estimates its annual overhead costs (rent, electricity, equipment depreciation) to be $120,000. They plan to work 5,000 direct labor hours for the year.
Using the calculator above:
- Total Overhead Costs: $120,000
- Allocation Base (Labor Hours): 5,000
- Calculation: $120,000 / 5,000 = $24.00
Result: The Overhead Recovery Rate is $24.00 per direct labor hour. This means for every hour a carpenter spends working on a table, the company must add $24.00 to the cost of that table to cover overhead expenses.
Why is this Metric Important?
1. Accurate Pricing: Without factoring in overhead, you might price products based solely on materials and labor, leading to selling at a loss despite high volume.
2. Budgeting: It helps in comparing actual overhead incurred versus absorbed overhead, allowing for variance analysis at the end of the accounting period.
3. Profit Analysis: Understanding the true cost of production helps identify which product lines are actually profitable and which are draining resources.