Calculate cost per equivalent unit using weighted-average process costing. Allocate materials and conversion costs to completed units and ending work-in-process inventory.
Process costing assigns manufacturing costs to large quantities of identical or nearly identical units flowing through continuous production processes. Industries like chemicals, food, petroleum, textiles, cement, and electronics use process costing because individual units cannot be distinguished from one another.
The key concept is equivalent units of production (EUP): a measure of partially completed units expressed as whole units. If 1,000 units are 40% complete for conversion costs, they represent 400 equivalent units. Materials and conversion costs are tracked separately because they are often added at different rates (materials may be 100% added at the start, while conversion happens evenly throughout the process).
This calculator uses the weighted-average method to compute cost per equivalent unit and allocate total costs between completed units and ending WIP.
Entrepreneurs, finance teams, and small-business owners gain a competitive edge from accurate process 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.
Process costing provides the cost-per-unit data needed for inventory valuation, pricing, profitability analysis, and cost control in continuous-flow manufacturing. Understanding equivalent units helps managers assess production efficiency, set accurate standard costs, and identify bottlenecks in the production process. Instant recalculation lets you test different assumptions side by side, giving you the confidence to act on data rather than gut instinct.
Equivalent Units (Weighted Avg) = Completed & Transferred + (Ending WIP × % Complete) Cost per EUP = (Beginning WIP Cost + Current Period Cost) ÷ Equivalent Units Cost of Completed = Completed Units × Cost per EUP Cost of Ending WIP = Ending WIP EUP × Cost per EUP
Result: $5.00/EUP materials + $8.00/EUP conversion = $13.00/unit completed
Completed units = 2,000 + 18,000 − 4,000 = 16,000. Materials EUP = 16,000 + 4,000 = 20,000. Conversion EUP = 16,000 + (4,000 × 25%) = 17,000. Materials cost/EUP = $100,000 ÷ 20,000 = $5.00. Conversion cost/EUP = $128,000 ÷ 17,000 ≈ $7.53.
The production cost report is the primary output of process costing. It includes four sections: physical unit flow (accounting for all units), equivalent units computation, cost per equivalent unit, and cost allocation to completed units and ending WIP. This report is prepared each period for each production department.
The weighted-average method treats beginning WIP and current period work as one pool, simplifying the calculation. Total cost to account for (beginning + added) is divided by total equivalent units (completed + ending WIP equivalent). This is the most common method in practice.
Compare cost per equivalent unit across periods to identify trends. Rising materials cost may indicate supplier price increases or waste. Rising conversion cost may indicate inefficiency, overtime, or equipment problems. Set standard costs per EUP and investigate significant variances.
An equivalent unit measures the amount of work done on partially completed units. If ending WIP has 2,000 units that are 50% complete for conversion, that equals 1,000 equivalent units of conversion work. This concept allows you to add partially completed units to fully completed ones for cost allocation purposes.
Weighted-average merges beginning WIP costs with current period costs, treating them as one pool. FIFO keeps beginning WIP costs separate and only costs current-period work. FIFO is more precise for cost control but more complex. Weighted-average is simpler and more widely used. Results are similar when costs are stable.
Materials and conversion costs are added at different points and rates in production. Materials might be 100% added at the start (like flour in a bakery), while conversion (labor + overhead) occurs throughout the process. Different completion percentages mean different equivalent units, requiring separate cost-per-EUP calculations.
Normal spoilage (expected waste within tolerance) is a product cost, absorbed by good units. Abnormal spoilage (unexpected, avoidable waste) is a period cost, expensed immediately. Good process costing systems separately track spoiled units to monitor quality and compute accurate per-unit costs for good output.
Process costing suits continuous production of identical items (chemicals, food, paper). Job costing suits unique, custom work (construction, printing, consulting). Many manufacturers use a hybrid: process costing within a department and job costing to track customer orders across departments.
In multi-department production, units completed in Department 1 are transferred to Department 2. Department 2 treats these as "transferred-in costs" — a third cost category alongside materials and conversion. Transferred-in units are always 100% complete for transferred-in costs in the receiving department.