All Study Guides Cost Accounting Unit 4
💸 Cost Accounting Unit 4 – Job Order CostingJob order costing is a method for tracking costs of producing unique products or batches. It assigns direct materials, labor, and overhead to specific jobs, enabling accurate pricing and cost control for custom orders in industries like construction and custom manufacturing.
This costing method helps determine profitability of individual jobs, provides a basis for pricing, and facilitates decision-making. Key components include direct materials, direct labor, manufacturing overhead, and job cost sheets, which are essential for tracking and analyzing costs.
What's Job Order Costing?
Job order costing tracks the costs of producing individual, unique products or batches
Used when each job has different specifications, materials, and labor requirements
Assigns direct materials, direct labor, and manufacturing overhead costs to specific jobs
Helps determine the cost and profitability of each job
Provides accurate pricing information for custom orders or bids
Allows for better control over costs by identifying areas of inefficiency or overruns
Useful in industries such as construction, printing, and custom manufacturing (furniture, jewelry)
Why Use Job Order Costing?
Enables accurate tracking of costs for unique products or services
Helps determine the profitability of individual jobs or orders
Provides a basis for pricing custom orders or bids
Allows for better cost control by identifying areas of inefficiency or cost overruns
Facilitates decision-making regarding job acceptance, resource allocation, and process improvements
Useful when there is a high degree of product customization or variability
Helps in generating detailed cost reports for management analysis and planning
Key Components of Job Order Costing
Direct materials are raw materials directly traceable to a specific job
Examples include wood for a custom furniture piece or fabric for a tailored garment
Direct labor is the cost of labor directly involved in producing a specific job
Includes wages of workers who directly contribute to the production of the job
Manufacturing overhead includes indirect costs allocated to jobs based on a predetermined rate
Examples include rent, utilities, and supervisor salaries
Job cost sheet is a document that tracks all costs associated with a specific job
Used to accumulate and summarize costs for each job
Setting Up a Job Cost Sheet
Create a unique job number for each job or batch
Record customer information, job specifications, and estimated costs
Set up columns for direct materials, direct labor, and manufacturing overhead
Include a section for actual costs incurred and a comparison to estimated costs
Provide space for notes and comments related to the job
Ensure the job cost sheet is easily accessible and updated regularly
Use the job cost sheet as a central document for tracking all job-related costs
Tracking Direct Costs
Record the cost of direct materials used for each job
Track materials issued from inventory or purchased specifically for the job
Document the direct labor hours worked on each job
Use timesheets or labor tracking systems to capture hours worked by employees
Calculate the cost of direct labor by multiplying hours worked by the hourly rate
Assign direct material and labor costs to the corresponding job cost sheet
Monitor direct costs throughout the production process to identify any variances or issues
Allocating Overhead Costs
Determine an allocation base for manufacturing overhead (direct labor hours, machine hours)
Calculate the predetermined overhead rate by dividing estimated overhead costs by the allocation base
Predetermined overhead rate = E s t i m a t e d o v e r h e a d c o s t s E s t i m a t e d a l l o c a t i o n b a s e \frac{Estimated\ overhead\ costs}{Estimated\ allocation\ base} E s t ima t e d a ll oc a t i o n ba se E s t ima t e d o v er h e a d cos t s
Apply manufacturing overhead to each job using the predetermined rate
Overhead applied = Actual quantity of allocation base × Predetermined overhead rate
Record the applied overhead costs on the job cost sheet
Monitor actual overhead costs and compare them to the applied overhead to identify any variances
Calculating the Total Job Cost
Sum up the direct material costs for the job
Add the total direct labor costs incurred for the job
Include the applied manufacturing overhead costs
Calculate the total job cost by adding direct materials, direct labor, and applied overhead
Total job cost = Direct materials + Direct labor + Applied overhead
Compare the total job cost to the estimated cost to determine any variances
Use the total job cost to assess profitability and make pricing decisions
Job Order Costing vs. Other Methods
Job order costing is suitable for unique, custom products or batches
Process costing is used for mass production of homogeneous products (beverages, chemicals)
Costs are tracked by department or process rather than by individual jobs
Activity-based costing (ABC) assigns costs to activities and then to products based on their consumption of those activities
Useful when there is a diverse product mix and varying levels of complexity
Standard costing compares actual costs to predetermined standard costs
Helps identify variances and areas for improvement
Job order costing provides the most accurate cost information for unique, custom products