Weighted average method (process costing)
Weighted average method (process costing) pools opening work-in-progress cost with the current period's cost and spreads the total over all equivalent units, unlike FIFO, which keeps the two layers separate.
See it move
A department carries €2,000 of opening materials cost, adds €18,000 this period, over 5,000 equivalent units, giving €4.00 per unit. Weighted average pools the opening cost straight in; FIFO instead keeps the €2,000 layer separate and costs only the units started and finished this period at the new rate, preserving that period's own cost change.
The formula
Variables
- Equivalent units (units)
- Units completed and transferred out (units)
- Closing work-in-progress units (units)
- Percentage complete for that cost element (%)
Gives the equivalent units of production for a cost element under the weighted average method, blending opening WIP with the current period rather than tracking it separately.
Variables
- Cost per equivalent unit (€)
- Opening WIP cost brought forward (€)
- Costs added this period (€)
- Equivalent units (units)
Pools the cost brought forward in opening WIP with the current period's cost before dividing by equivalent units — the step that defines the weighted average method.
Check yourself
A process department uses the weighted average method. Opening work-in-progress is 800 units, carrying forward €1,800 of conversion cost. During the month, 7,200 units are started, 7,000 units are completed and transferred out, and closing WIP is 1,000 units, 20% complete for conversion. Conversion costs added during the month total €21,600. What is the cost per equivalent unit for conversion?