High-low method
High-low method separates a mixed cost into fixed and variable components using only two observations: the period with the highest activity and the period with the lowest.
Also known ashigh low
See it move
A scatter chart plots cost in euros against activity measured in dispatches, with a straight line drawn through only the two extreme data points: the high point at 4,000 dispatches costing €2,600 and the low point at 1,000 dispatches costing €1,100. The slope — (€2,600 − €1,100) ÷ (4,000 − 1,000) — gives a variable rate of €0.50 per dispatch, and the y-intercept of €600 represents the fixed component. All observations between the two extremes are ignored by the method.
The formula
Variables
- Estimated variable cost per unit of activity (€ per unit of activity)
Variables
- Constant cost component, unchanged within the relevant range (€)
Variables
- Volume of activity (e.g. units, machine-hours, dispatches) (units)
The estimated mixed-cost function derived from the two data points.
Check yourself
A service centre records the following monthly data: September (the busiest month) had 1,800 service calls and total costs of €14,400; February (the quietest month) had 600 service calls and total costs of €6,000. Using the high-low method, what is the estimated monthly fixed cost?