Are selling and administrative expenses treated as product cost or period cost under variable costing?

In comparing the two income statements for Bradley, we notice that the cost of goods sold under absorption is $3.90 per unit and $3.30 per unit under variable costing.  The income reported under each statement is off by $600 because of this difference ($8,100 under absorption and $7,500 under variable).  Let’s review how these costs were calculated:

Absorption Variable
Direct Materials $13,000 $13,000
+ Direct Labor $15,000 $15,000
+ Variable Overhead $5,000 $5,000
+ Fixed Overhead $6,000 do not include
= Total Product Cost $39,000 $33,000
÷ Total Units Produced ÷ 10,000 ÷ 10,000
= Product cost per unit $3.90 $3.30

Since fixed overhead cost is given to each unit produced under the absorption costing method, the 1,000 units remaining in inventory carry forward some of May’s fixed costs into the next period.  The variable costing method treats the fixed overhead as relating to May only and not to any specific units.  Ending inventory would be calculated as:

Absorption Variable
$3,900 (1,000 units x $3.90 cost) $3,300 (1,000 units x $3.30 cost)

These differences are due to the treatment of fixed manufacturing costs. Under absorption costing, each unit in ending inventory carries $0.60 of fixed overhead cost as part of product cost. At the end of the month, Bradley has 1,000 units in inventory. Therefore, ending inventory under absorption costing includes $600 of fixed manufacturing overhead costs ($0.60 X 1,000 units) and is valued at $600 more than under variable costing.

Are selling and administrative expenses treated as product cost or period cost under variable costing?

Under variable costing, companies charge off, or expense, all the fixed manufacturing costs during the period rather than deferring their expense and carrying them forward to the next period as part of inventory cost. Therefore, $6,000 of fixed manufacturing costs appear on the variable costing income statement as an expense, rather than $5,400 ($6,000 fixed overhead costs – $600 fixed manufacturing included in inventory) under absorption costing. Consequently, income before income taxes under variable costing is $600 less than under absorption costing because more costs are expensed during the period.

Finally, remember that the difference between the absorption costing and variable costing methods is solely in the treatment of fixed manufacturing overhead costs and income statement presentation. Both methods treat selling and administrative expenses as period costs. Regarding selling and administrative expenses, the only difference is their placement on the income statement and the segregation of variable and fixed selling and administrative expenses. Variable selling and administrative expenses are not part of product cost under either method.

As a general rule, relate the difference in net income under absorption costing and variable costing to the change in inventories. Assuming a relatively constant level of production, if inventories increase during the year, production exceeded sales and reported income before federal income taxes is less under variable costing than under absorption costing. Conversely, if inventories decreased, then sales exceeded production, and income before income taxes is larger under variable costing than under absorption costing.

Variable costing is not currently acceptable for income measurement or inventory valuation in external financial statements that must comply with generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) in the United States. However, managers often use variable costing for internal company reports.  Here is a video comparing the two methods:

SUMMARY

  1.  Product costs are calculated differently under each method:
Absorption Variable
Direct Materials Include Include
Direct Labor Include Include
Overhead:
    Variable Overhead Include Include
    Fixed Overhead Include DO NOT include
Total Product Costs Sum sum
÷ Total Units Produced ÷ Total Units Produced ÷ Total Units Produced
Product Cost per Unit = Cost per unit = Cost per unit

2.  Income statement formats are different under each method (both use units sold for variable expenses):

  • Absorption uses standard GAAP income statement of Sales – Cost of Goods Sold = Gross Profit – Operating Expenses = Net Operating Income
  • Variable uses a contribution margin income statement of Sales – Variable Costs = Contribution Margin – Fixed Expenses = Net Operating Income

3.   Net income on the two reports can be different if units produced do not equal units sold.

Are selling and administrative expenses included in variable costing?

Variable costing accounts for both variable and fixed non-manufacturing costs, i.e., selling and administrative costs, and fixed manufacturing overhead as period costs.

Are selling and administrative expenses treated as product costs or period costs under variable costing What about manufacturing overhead MOH costs?

The correct answer is (b) period cost. Under variable costing, all direct materials, direct labor, and variable manufacturing overhead are recognized as product costs.

Are selling and administrative expenses treated as product costs or as period costs?

Overhead or sales, general, and administrative (SG&A) costs are considered period costs. SG&A includes costs of the corporate office, selling, marketing, and the overall administration of company business. Period costs are not assigned to one particular product or the cost of inventory like product costs.

Is variable selling expense a period cost?

Under variable costing, fixed manufacturing overhead is treated as a period cost and is charged in full against the current period's income. 7-2 Selling and administrative expenses are treated as period costs under both variable costing and absorption costing.