Absorption Rate Calculator (Accounting)
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Total Manufacturing Overhead:
Understanding Absorption Rate in Accounting
In managerial accounting, the absorption rate (also known as the predetermined overhead rate) is a metric used to allocate manufacturing overhead costs to the products produced during a specific period. Unlike variable costing, which only assigns variable costs to products, absorption costing ensures that every unit produced "absorbs" a portion of both fixed and variable manufacturing overhead.
The Absorption Rate Formula
To calculate the absorption rate, you must aggregate all indirect manufacturing costs and divide them by a chosen allocation base (most commonly units produced, direct labor hours, or machine hours).
Key Components
- Fixed Manufacturing Overhead: Costs that do not change with production volume, such as factory rent, insurance, and salaries for plant managers.
- Variable Manufacturing Overhead: Indirect costs that fluctuate with production volume, such as electricity for machinery or factory supplies.
- Allocation Base: The measure used to assign costs. While our calculator uses "Units Produced," businesses often use "Direct Labor Hours" if production is labor-intensive.
Practical Example
Imagine a furniture manufacturer, "Elite Desks," that produced 5,000 desks last month. Their financial records show the following:
- Fixed Factory Rent and Salaries: $40,000
- Variable Factory Utilities and Supplies: $10,000
- Total Units: 5,000 Desks
Step 1: Sum the overhead costs: $40,000 + $10,000 = $50,000 total overhead.
Step 2: Divide by units: $50,000 / 5,000 units = $10.00 per desk.
In this scenario, for every desk produced, $10.00 of overhead cost is added to the direct materials and direct labor costs to determine the total product cost under absorption costing.
Why Is It Important?
Absorption costing is required by Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) and International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) for external financial reporting. It provides a more accurate picture of the total cost required to manufacture a product, which helps management set sustainable selling prices and determine the true profitability of their inventory.