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Practical capacity

Practical capacity is the realistic maximum output a department can produce after allowing for normal downtime such as maintenance and breaks, used as the denominator when setting a predetermined overhead rate.

ByHoang TruongUpdated

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Practical capacity is the realistic maximum output after normal downtime, used as the denominator for a predetermined overhead rate. Corvina Bottling's plant has a practical capacity of 400,000 bottles a year, priced at €2.00 each from €800,000 budgeted overhead. Producing only 320,000 bottles leaves 80,000 unused, and €160,000 of overhead under-absorbed.

Where it fits
SubjectCost AccountingCoreTopicAbsorption & Variable CostingCoreTopicOverhead Allocation & ABCCore

The formula

LaTeX
R=FOHbPCR = \dfrac{FOH_b}{PC}

Variables

Predetermined fixed overhead rate (€ per unit)
Budgeted fixed overhead ()
Practical capacity (units)

Practical capacity is one of several possible denominators; using it produces a rate that makes the cost of unused capacity visible as a separate variance.

Check yourself

PracticeCORE

Solenne Textiles has budgeted fixed manufacturing overhead of €540,000 for the year. Its practical capacity is 90,000 metres of fabric. Actual production for the year is 75,000 metres, and actual fixed overhead incurred is €540,000. What is the under- or over-absorbed fixed overhead for the year?

Select an answer to check your understanding.