Skip to main content

Over- or under-applied overhead

Over- or under-applied overhead is the difference between overhead applied to production using the predetermined rate and overhead actually incurred.

Also known asunderapplied overhead

ByHoang TruongUpdated

FrameworkNormal costing

See it move

Loading infographic...

The infographic is a side-by-side comparison panel contrasting applied and actual overhead. The left column shows applied overhead calculated as €8 per hour × 12,000 hours = €96,000; the right column shows actual factory overhead of €101,000, leaving an underapplied gap of €5,000. Because actual overhead exceeds what was applied, the €5,000 shortfall is closed by adding it to cost of goods sold at the period end.

Where it fits
SubjectCost AccountingAdvancedTopicJob & Process CostingAdvanced

The formula

LaTeX
OHapplied=POHR×AactOH_{applied} = POHR \times A_{act}

Variables

Manufacturing overhead applied to jobs in the period ()
Predetermined overhead rate (€ per activity unit)
Actual activity units used in the period (activity units)

Applied overhead is added to jobs throughout the year using the estimated rate set before the period starts.

LaTeX
VarOH=OHappliedOHactualVar_{OH} = OH_{applied} - OH_{actual}

Variables

Overhead applied to jobs via the predetermined rate ()
Actual manufacturing overhead incurred in the period ()

A positive result is overapplied (too much loaded onto jobs); a negative result is underapplied. The balance is closed to cost of goods sold at year end.

Check yourself

PracticeCORE

A manufacturer sets a predetermined overhead rate of €18 per machine-hour. During the year, 9,500 machine-hours are worked and actual manufacturing overhead incurred is €178,300. What is the overhead variance, and how is it classified?

Select an answer to check your understanding.