Calculate product cost using variable costing by including only direct materials, direct labor, and variable overhead. Fixed overhead is a period cost.
Variable costing, also called direct costing or marginal costing, includes only variable manufacturing costs in the product cost: direct materials, direct labor, and variable manufacturing overhead. Fixed manufacturing overhead is treated entirely as a period cost and expensed in the period incurred, regardless of how many units are produced or sold.
This approach provides clearer insight into how costs behave with changes in production volume. Because fixed overhead is not buried inside unit costs, managers can see the true incremental cost of producing one more unit. This makes variable costing essential for contribution margin analysis, break-even calculations, CVP analysis, and short-term pricing decisions.
While variable costing is not permitted for external financial reporting under GAAP or IFRS, it is widely used for internal management accounting. This calculator helps manufacturing teams compute variable product cost per unit and see how fixed overhead impacts the bottom line as a lump-sum period expense.
Variable costing isolates the costs that actually change when you make one more unit. This clarity is invaluable for decisions like whether to accept a special order, which products to push, or where to set short-run pricing floors. It also prevents the profit distortions that absorption costing creates when production and sales volumes diverge.
Product Cost per Unit = Direct Materials + Direct Labor + Variable Overhead Period Cost = Total Fixed Manufacturing Overhead Contribution per Unit = Selling Price − Variable Cost per Unit
Result: $48.00 variable cost per unit
Variable cost per unit = $25 + $15 + $8 = $48. The entire $50,000 fixed overhead is expensed as a period cost. Under absorption costing the same product would cost $58/unit, and 500 unsold units would carry $5,000 of fixed OH in inventory. Variable costing keeps that $5,000 on the income statement.
The fundamental difference lies in fixed manufacturing overhead treatment. Under variable costing, fixed overhead goes directly to the income statement as a period expense. Under absorption costing, it is allocated to each unit and stays in inventory until units are sold. When production and sales volumes match, both methods yield identical net income.
Variable costing naturally feeds into contribution margin analysis. The contribution margin per unit — selling price minus variable cost — shows how much each unit contributes toward covering fixed costs and generating profit. This metric drives decisions about product mix, pricing, and sales focus.
Many manufacturers maintain dual costing systems: absorption costing for external reporting and variable costing for internal management. Modern ERP systems make this straightforward by tagging costs as fixed or variable at the point of entry, allowing reports in either format with minimal additional effort.
Variable costing is a method that assigns only variable manufacturing costs — direct materials, direct labor, and variable overhead — to each unit. Fixed manufacturing overhead is treated as a period expense, charged entirely against revenue in the period it is incurred.
When production exceeds sales, absorption costing defers some fixed overhead in ending inventory, boosting reported profit. Variable costing expenses all fixed overhead immediately. When sales exceed production, the opposite occurs. Over the long run both methods report the same total profit.
No. GAAP and IFRS require absorption costing for external financial statements and tax reporting. Variable costing is used internally by management accountants for decision-making, pricing analysis, and performance evaluation.
Variable costing clearly separates costs that change with volume from those that do not. This makes it easy to determine break-even points, evaluate special orders, and understand how each additional unit contributes to covering fixed costs and generating profit.
By isolating variable costs, managers can see the minimum price at which a product still contributes to fixed costs. Any price above the variable cost per unit generates a positive contribution margin, which is useful for short-term pricing, discount analysis, and special-order evaluation.
Fixed manufacturing overhead costs like factory rent, equipment depreciation, plant management salaries, and factory insurance are excluded from the product cost. They are expensed in full as period costs on the income statement each period.