Calculate total quality appraisal costs including inspection labor, test equipment depreciation, calibration, and audits. Optimize detection spending.
Appraisal costs are the expenses incurred to detect defects before products reach customers. They include inspection labor (incoming, in-process, and final inspection), test equipment depreciation and maintenance, calibration of measurement instruments, and quality audits (internal and external). These costs are necessary to catch defects that prevention activities did not eliminate.
While appraisal is essential, excessive appraisal indicates insufficient prevention. If you are inspecting 100% of production because your process is unreliable, the real problem is the process — not the lack of inspection. Mature quality systems shift from heavy inspection to statistical sampling as process capability improves, reducing appraisal costs while maintaining detection effectiveness.
This calculator helps quality managers and operations teams quantify their appraisal spending across the four major components. Use it for budgeting, Cost of Quality analysis, and identifying opportunities to reduce appraisal costs through process improvement.
Understanding this metric in quantitative terms allows manufacturing leaders to prioritize improvement initiatives and allocate limited resources where they will deliver the greatest operational impact.
Appraisal costs are often the second-largest quality cost category, yet many companies do not track them separately from production overhead. This calculator gives you visibility into what you spend on detection activities, helping you optimize the balance between inspection intensity and process capability. Regular monitoring of this value helps teams detect deviations quickly and maintain the operational discipline needed for sustained manufacturing excellence and competitiveness.
Appraisal Cost = Inspection Labor + Test Equipment Depreciation + Calibration + Audits Appraisal % of Revenue = (Appraisal Cost ÷ Revenue) × 100
Result: $80,000 total appraisal cost (1.6% of revenue)
Inspection labor ($45K) + Test equipment depreciation ($18K) + Calibration ($8K) + Audits ($9K) = $80,000 total appraisal cost. At $5M revenue, this represents 1.6%. Inspection labor is 56% of appraisal — the largest component.
The ideal quality cost distribution shifts over time. Early in a quality journey, companies rely heavily on appraisal to catch defects. As prevention investments mature — SPC, FMEA, training, mistake-proofing — process capability improves and appraisal can be reduced without increasing defect escapes. The savings from reduced appraisal partially fund continued prevention improvement.
Modern inspection technology — machine vision, laser measurement, automated CMM, and in-line testing — can dramatically reduce the labor component of appraisal while improving detection speed and consistency. The capital cost adds to equipment depreciation but is often offset by labor savings and improved detection rates.
Quality audits serve dual purposes. Process audits assess whether operations follow established procedures (appraisal). When auditors identify improvement opportunities, the resulting actions serve prevention. Effective audit programs are structured around risk, focusing frequency and depth on high-risk processes and suppliers.
Appraisal costs are quality costs incurred to evaluate products and processes for conformance. They include all inspection and testing activities, the equipment used for measurement, calibration to ensure measurement accuracy, and audits that assess quality system effectiveness.
No. Excessive inspection is a symptom of poor process control. The goal is to build quality into the process so that inspection confirms what you already know — that parts are good. As process capability improves, inspection can shift from 100% to sampling, reducing appraisal costs.
Use process capability data. If your process Cpk is above 1.33, sampling plans provide adequate detection with much lower cost. For processes with lower capability, 100% inspection may be necessary until the process is improved. Critical safety characteristics may always require 100% inspection.
Any equipment used for quality evaluation: CMMs, vision systems, gauges, hardness testers, surface roughness testers, environmental chambers, leak testers, balances, pH meters, and their associated depreciation, maintenance, and calibration costs. Reviewing these factors periodically ensures your analysis stays current as conditions and requirements evolve over time.
Calibration frequency depends on instrument stability, usage intensity, and measurement criticality. Start with manufacturer recommendations and adjust based on calibration history. Instruments that consistently pass calibration can have intervals extended; those that drift need shorter intervals.
Yes. Incoming material inspection labor, testing, and equipment depreciation are appraisal costs. As you qualify suppliers and develop confidence in their quality, you can reduce incoming inspection to skip-lot or dock-to-stock programs, lowering this component of appraisal cost.