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Job costing

Job costing is a method of accumulating production costs separately for each distinct order, contract, or batch.

Also known asjob-order costing

ByHoang TruongUpdated

FrameworkJob-order costing

See it move

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A stacked bar accumulates three cost layers for Job #42: direct materials at €800, direct labour at €500, and applied overhead at €300, reaching a job total of €1,600. The applied overhead figure derives from 20 machine hours multiplied by the predetermined rate of €15 per machine hour. Each segment of the stack is proportional to its cost, making it straightforward to see which element dominates the job's total.

Where it fits
SubjectCost AccountingCoreTopicJob & Process CostingCore

The formula

LaTeX
Total Job Cost=Direct Materials+Direct Labour+Applied Manufacturing Overhead\text{Total Job Cost} = \text{Direct Materials} + \text{Direct Labour} + \text{Applied Manufacturing Overhead}

Variables

Predetermined overhead rate × actual driver units consumed by the job ()
LaTeX
Applied Overhead=Predetermined Overhead Rate×Actual Driver Units\text{Applied Overhead} = \text{Predetermined Overhead Rate} \times \text{Actual Driver Units}

Variables

Budgeted total overhead ÷ budgeted driver units; set before the period begins (€ per driver unit)
e.g. direct labour-hours or machine-hours consumed by the job (hours)

Check yourself

PracticeCORE

A joinery workshop uses job costing. For Job #77, the cost sheet records: direct materials €650; direct labour at 18 hours × €22 per hour; and manufacturing overhead applied at €15 per direct labour hour. What is the total cost assigned to Job #77?

Select an answer to check your understanding.