Applied Overhead

  

Costs accrued during the production process of whatevers that are not tied to a product or service...need to be included in cost of goods sold for accounting purposes. In this sense, accountants are applying the overhead "ratably" on a unit-by-unit basis.

So, for example, the annual charge of $10M to rent the rubber extruding whoopee cushion blower has to be ratably expensed against the 5M whoopee cushions being produced that year. In this sense, the applied overhead then adds $2 per cushion. Which is, uh...more for the pushin'.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is COGS (Cost Of Goods Sol...40 Views

00:00

Finance allah shmoop What is a cog sze or cost

00:05

of goods sold So yeah what are cogsa Yeah and

00:10

they're not the shoes your mom bought a penny on

00:13

saturday and it's not what the plumber had to remove

00:17

from your toilet consisting of hair clumps toenails and discarded

00:20

q tips Yeah that's clogs and we're talking cogsa Cost

00:24

of goods sold and note that there is no cobb's

00:28

which would be a cost of bads sold when you

00:31

have a business Selling things is pretty much always a

00:33

good well cog czar All the expenses the company needs

00:37

to pay to get their products out the door So

00:39

the company that makes your shoes might have to pay

00:42

for material to make those shoes the process of making

00:45

them the price tags and boxes for the shoes and

00:48

you know shipping delivery and everything else that it takes

00:51

to get the shoes to the store or no to

00:54

your doorstep Those costs all together are the cog sze

00:57

of your uh adidas or nikes or the cog sze 00:01:01.705 --> [endTime] of your clogs

Up Next

Finance: What is Accrual Accounting?
39 Views

What is Accrual Accounting? Accrual accounting is used to determine how well a company is doing by looking at the present and the future. It takes...

Finance: What is overhead?
14187 Views

What is overhead? Overhead refers to a business’s operating expenses. These can include, rent, supplies, insurance, utilities, payroll, etc. Over...

Find other enlightening terms in Shmoop Finance Genius Bar(f)