Job Costing Calculator

Calculate the total cost and profitability of individual jobs or projects. Track direct materials, direct labor, and applied overhead per job for accurate project pricing.

About the Job Costing Calculator

Job costing (also called job-order costing) tracks the costs of individual jobs, batches, or projects. Each job has its own cost sheet that accumulates direct materials, direct labor, and applied manufacturing overhead. This system is used by custom manufacturers, construction companies, repair shops, professional services firms, print shops, and any business that produces unique products or services to customer specifications.

Unlike process costing (which averages costs across identical units), job costing maintains separate cost records for each job, enabling precise profitability analysis per project. The overhead application rate is predetermined at the start of the period and applied based on an allocation base such as direct labor hours or machine hours.

This calculator lets you build a job cost sheet, apply overhead using a predetermined rate, compute total cost and markup, and analyze profitability.

Entrepreneurs, finance teams, and small-business owners gain a competitive edge from accurate job costing data when setting prices, forecasting revenue, or managing operational costs. Save this tool and revisit it each quarter to keep your financial plans aligned with current market realities.

Why Use This Job Costing Calculator?

Job costing is essential for businesses that need to know whether each individual job is profitable. Without accurate job-level cost tracking, you may be under-bidding complex jobs and over-bidding simple ones. Job costing also supports progress billing, change order pricing, variance analysis, and future bid estimation based on historical data.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the predetermined overhead rate and the allocation base (e.g., labor hours).
  2. Enter direct materials cost for the job.
  3. Enter direct labor hours and the hourly labor rate.
  4. The calculator applies overhead based on your rate and allocation base.
  5. Set the bid price or markup percentage to calculate profitability.
  6. Review the complete job cost sheet and profit analysis.

Formula

Direct Labor Cost = Hours × Hourly Rate Applied Overhead = Overhead Rate × Allocation Base Total Job Cost = DM + DL + Applied OH Job Profit = Bid Price − Total Cost Markup % = (Profit ÷ Cost) × 100

Example Calculation

Result: $12,000 bid, $8,200 cost, $3,800 profit (46.3% markup)

DL = 80 hrs × $25 = $2,000. Applied OH = 80 hrs × $15 = $1,200. Total cost = $5,000 + $2,000 + $1,200 = $8,200. Bid of $12,000 yields $3,800 profit, a 46.3% markup on cost or 31.7% gross margin.

Tips & Best Practices

The Job Cost Sheet

The job cost sheet is the central document in job costing. It accumulates all costs charged to a specific job: material requisitions, labor time tickets, and applied overhead. Modern ERP systems maintain electronic job cost sheets that provide real-time cost tracking and variance alerts.

Bidding and Estimation

Accurate historical job cost data is the foundation for competitive bidding. By analyzing similar past jobs, you can estimate material quantities, labor hours, and overhead more accurately. Add appropriate markup for profit, risk, and market conditions. Track bid accuracy over time to improve estimating.

Over/Under-Applied Overhead

Because the overhead rate is predetermined using estimates, there will always be a difference between applied and actual overhead. A small variance is normal. Large variances indicate that either the activity level or overhead spending differed significantly from estimates, suggesting the rate should be revised.

Frequently Asked Questions

What types of businesses use job costing?

Job costing is used by custom manufacturers, construction contractors, print shops, law firms, accounting firms, consulting firms, auto repair shops, movie studios, advertising agencies, and any business that produces unique products or services. The common thread is that each job is distinct enough to warrant individual cost tracking.

How is the predetermined overhead rate calculated?

The rate is estimated at the start of the period: Estimated Total OH ÷ Estimated Total Allocation Base. For example, if estimated overhead is $300,000 and estimated labor hours are 20,000, the rate is $15/labor hour. This rate is applied throughout the period regardless of actual overhead incurred.

What happens when applied overhead differs from actual?

The difference is called over- or under-applied overhead. If applied exceeds actual, overhead is over-applied (favorable). If actual exceeds applied, overhead is under-applied (unfavorable). At period end, the difference is typically closed to COGS or allocated across WIP, FG, and COGS.

How does job costing differ from process costing?

Job costing tracks costs per individual job or batch; process costing averages costs across large numbers of identical units. Job costing is for heterogeneous products; process costing is for homogeneous products. Many companies use a hybrid approach with elements of both systems.

Should I include selling and admin costs in job cost?

For internal decision-making, many companies add an allocation of S&A costs to get a "fully loaded" job cost. For inventory valuation under GAAP, only manufacturing costs are included. This calculator focuses on manufacturing cost, but you can add S&A as a separate line for bid pricing.

How do I handle work-in-progress (WIP) jobs?

WIP jobs have costs accumulated but are not yet complete. The costs remain on the job cost sheet as an asset (WIP Inventory) until the job is completed. At completion, costs transfer from WIP to Finished Goods (or COGS if immediately delivered). Track WIP to maintain accurate balance sheet inventory.

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