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Controllable profit

Controllable profit is a division's revenue minus only those costs the divisional manager can directly influence within the period, excluding allocated head-office overhead and other non-controllable charges; it is the appropriate.

ByHoang TruongUpdated

FrameworkSegment reporting

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A division reports revenue of €500,000. Deducting €220,000 of directly attributable variable costs, then €150,000 of fixed costs the manager genuinely controls — their own staff, divisional marketing, locally negotiated premises — leaves a controllable profit of €130,000. Allocated head-office overhead and depreciation the manager did not choose sit below this line, in the fuller divisional profit figure, not inside it.

Where it fits
TopicResponsibility Accounting & DecentralisationCoreSubjectManagerial AccountingCoreTopicDivisional Performance MeasurementCore

The formula

LaTeX
CP=RVCCFC\text{CP} = R - VC - CFC

Variables

revenue generated by the division during the period ()
variable costs directly attributable to the division's operations ()
fixed costs within the divisional manager's direct authority — those that would change with decisions the manager can make ()

Allocated head-office overhead, centrally imposed depreciation and other charges the manager cannot influence are excluded. This is the appropriate line for evaluating managerial performance; it differs from total divisional profit, which includes all costs attributable to the segment.

Check yourself

PracticeCORE

A retail division reports revenue of €5,000,000 and total operating costs of €3,800,000, which include €400,000 of group IT infrastructure fees allocated centrally on a formula the divisional manager cannot influence. The division also incurs a notional interest charge of €200,000 imposed by group treasury. For evaluating the divisional manager's performance, which profit figure is most appropriate, and what is its value?

Select an answer to check your understanding.
Controllable profit — Edlintics Glossary