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Manufacturing cost flow

Manufacturing cost flow: the path production costs travel through a manufacturer's accounts, moving from direct materials, labour and overhead into work in progress, then finished goods, then cost of goods sold.

ByHoang TruongUpdated

See it move

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A furniture workshop incurs €18,000 of direct materials, €12,000 of direct labour and €9,000 of overhead, totalling €39,000 in manufacturing costs. Work in progress moves from €4,000 to €6,000, giving a cost of goods manufactured of €37,000. Finished goods moves from €5,000 to €3,000, so cost of goods sold for the month is €39,000, the same figure the period started with.

Where it fits
SubjectCost AccountingCoreTopicProduct Costing & Cost of Goods ManufacturedCore

The formula

LaTeX
COGM=WIPbeg+(DM+DL+OH)WIPendCOGM = WIP_{beg} + (DM + DL + OH) - WIP_{end}

Variables

Cost of goods manufactured ()
Beginning work-in-progress inventory ()
Direct materials used ()
Direct labour ()
Manufacturing overhead applied ()
Ending work-in-progress inventory ()

Converts the period's total manufacturing costs into the cost of the units actually completed, by adjusting for unfinished work at each end of the period.

LaTeX
COGS=COGM+FGbegFGendCOGS = COGM + FG_{beg} - FG_{end}

Variables

Cost of goods sold ()
Cost of goods manufactured ()
Beginning finished-goods inventory ()
Ending finished-goods inventory ()

Converts the cost of units completed into the cost of units actually sold in the period, by adjusting for finished-goods inventory at each end of the period.

Check yourself

PracticeCORE

A furniture manufacturer's cost records for the month show: beginning work-in-progress €7,000, direct materials used €22,000, direct labour €15,000, manufacturing overhead applied €11,000, and ending work-in-progress €9,000. What is the cost of goods manufactured for the month?

Select an answer to check your understanding.