Skip to main content

Separable costs

Separable costs are costs incurred on a joint product after the split-off point, traceable only to that product — the figure that matters in a sell-or-process-further decision.

ByHoang TruongUpdated

See it move

Loading infographic...

Product X can be sold at split-off for €50,000, or processed further for €12,000 in separable costs and sold for €68,000. Incremental revenue is €68,000 minus €50,000, or €18,000, which exceeds the €12,000 separable cost by €6,000 — so processing further is the better choice. The €40,000 joint cost plays no part in the decision.

Where it fits
SubjectCost AccountingCoreTopicJoint Products, By-Products & SpoilageCore

The formula

LaTeX
NB=IRSCNB = IR - SC

Variables

Net benefit of further processing ()
Incremental revenue from further processing ()
Separable costs of further processing ()

Positive when the extra revenue from processing further exceeds the separable cost of getting there; joint costs incurred before split-off never enter this comparison.

Check yourself

PracticeCORE

A joint process splits into Product A and Product B. At split-off, Product A can be sold for €30,000. Further processing costs €9,000 and would allow it to be sold for €42,000. Joint costs incurred before split-off were €15,000. What is the financial effect of processing Product A further rather than selling it at split-off?

Select an answer to check your understanding.