Allocate overheads to products using up to three activity cost pools and drivers, and compare the resulting unit cost to traditional volume-based overhead absorption.
Données vérifiées · juillet 2026
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Activity-based costing groups overheads into cost pools driven by real activities — set-ups, orders processed, machine hours — rather than spreading them evenly per unit. Each pool's cost is divided by its total driver volume to give a rate, then multiplied by the driver units actually consumed by your product, giving a more accurate overhead cost per unit than a single traditional overhead rate.
1,000 units, £15 material + £10 labour per unit, a set-up pool of £20,000 (500 total set-ups, 50 used by this product): set-up rate £40/setup adds £2,000 to this product's overhead.
Enter units produced and the direct material and labour cost per unit.
For each of up to three cost pools, enter the pool's total cost, the total driver volume across all products, and the driver volume used by this product.
Enter your traditional (volume-based) overhead rate per unit for comparison.
Compare the ABC total unit cost to the traditional unit cost.
Dernière mise à jour des données
7 juillet 2026
Sources et références
CIMA — Activity-Based Costing (ABC) topic guide; Drury, Management and Cost Accounting, activity-based costing chapter.
Les données de ce calculateur sont mises à jour régulièrement pour refléter les derniers barèmes officiels. En cas de doute, consultez les sources officielles mentionnées ci-dessus.
No — leave unused pools at zero; the calculator only allocates overhead for the pools you complete.
Traditional costing spreads overhead evenly per unit, understating the cost of complex, low-volume products that consume a disproportionate share of set-ups, orders and other activities — ABC corrects for this.