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Cost behaviour

Cost behaviour describes how total cost responds to changes in activity volume: fixed costs stay constant in total, variable costs rise proportionally, and mixed costs combine a fixed base with a variable element.

Also known ascost behavior

ByHoang TruongUpdated

See it move

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A cost-behaviour chart plots three cost lines against activity volume on the x-axis and total cost in euros on the y-axis. The fixed cost line is horizontal, unchanged by volume. The variable cost line starts at the origin and rises proportionally with output. The mixed cost line begins at a non-zero standing charge and then climbs with a constant slope, combining a fixed element with a variable element; the visual note confirms: fixed stays flat, variable rises from the origin, mixed has a standing charge then a slope.

Where it fits
SubjectCost AccountingCoreTopicCost Behaviour & EstimationCore

The formula

LaTeX
TC=FC+v×QTC = FC + v \times Q

Variables

total cost ()
total fixed cost (constant within the relevant range) ()
variable cost per unit of activity (€ per unit)
activity level (units produced, machine hours, etc.) (units)

The general mixed cost equation. Set FC = 0 for a purely variable cost; set v = 0 for a purely fixed cost.

Check yourself

PracticeCORE

A firm's monthly factory lease costs €8,000 regardless of output. Materials cost €6 per unit produced. Production rises from 2,000 units last month to 3,000 units this month. Which statement correctly describes how each cost changes?

Select an answer to check your understanding.
Cost Behaviour — Fixed, Variable and Mixed