Activity-based costing
Activity-based costing assigns overhead to products by first grouping costs into activity pools — such as machine set-ups or quality inspections — and then applying a separate driver-based rate to each pool.
Also known asABC
FrameworkActivity-based costing (ABC)
See it move
A three-step flow shows all indirect manufacturing costs gathered on the left, then grouped by activity into cost pools — including a set-ups pool of €50,000, an inspections pool, and a machine-running pool — each divided by its own driver. Products on the right are charged only for the activities they actually consume, replacing the distortions of a single blanket overhead rate.
The formula
Variables
- Activity rate (€ per driver unit)
- Budgeted activity pool cost (€)
- Budgeted quantity of activity driver (driver units)
Each activity pool carries its own rate, replacing the single volume-based rate used in traditional costing.
Variables
- Overhead assigned to the product (€)
- Activity rate (€ per driver unit)
- Activity driver units consumed by the product (driver units)
Products that consume more of an activity bear more of that activity's cost.
Check yourself
A factory has two overhead pools: a machine-running pool of €60,000 driven by 3,000 machine-hours, and a set-up pool of €24,000 driven by 80 set-ups. A product batch uses 200 machine-hours and requires 4 set-ups. What is the total overhead charged to the batch under activity-based costing?