Service department cost allocation
Service-department cost allocation reassigns the costs of support departments — such as maintenance or IT — into production departments before product unit costs are calculated, ensuring indirect support costs eventually reach products.
FrameworkOverhead absorption
See it move
Maintenance costs €60,000 and serves two production departments. Under the direct method, Machining — using 70 percent of maintenance's output — absorbs €42,000, and Assembly — using the remaining 30 percent — absorbs €18,000. Both figures then flow into each department's own overhead absorption rate. The direct method ignores any service maintenance provides to other service departments, which the step-down and reciprocal methods capture more precisely.
The formula
Variables
- The volume of services consumed by one production department from the service department (—)
- Total services consumed by all production departments combined (excluding other service depts under the direct method) (—)
- All costs accumulated in the service department before reallocation (€)
Direct method — ignores services rendered between service departments
Check yourself
Why must the costs of service departments — such as maintenance and human resources — be allocated to production departments before calculating product unit costs?