Normal costing
Normal costing records actual direct materials and direct labour for each job but applies manufacturing overhead at a rate set before the period begins.
FrameworkNormal costing
See it move
The infographic is a stacked-bar diagram that builds the cost of a single job from three layers: actual direct materials of €2,400, actual direct labour of €850, and applied overhead of €440, giving a job total of €3,690. The applied overhead is computed as 22 machine-hours at the predetermined rate of €20 per machine-hour, allowing the job cost to be known as soon as work is complete, without waiting for actual overhead figures.
The formula
Variables
- Predetermined overhead rate (€ per activity unit)
- Budgeted total manufacturing overhead for the period (€)
- Budgeted activity base (e.g. machine-hours or direct labour-hours) (activity units)
The rate is set before the period begins so overhead can be attached to jobs as they are completed.
Variables
- Total job cost under normal costing (€)
- Actual direct materials cost for the job (€)
- Actual direct labour cost for the job (€)
- Predetermined overhead rate (€ per activity unit)
- Actual activity units consumed by the job (activity units)
Normal costing uses actual inputs for direct costs and an estimated rate for overhead, avoiding the wait for period-end overhead totals.
Check yourself
Under normal costing, which combination of inputs correctly describes how a completed job's total cost is determined?