Learning Outcomes
- Differentiate between period and product costs
Product costs are incurred when a company manufactures goods, and they include everything from the freight paid on raw materials coming in, to the electricity bill for the factory, to the final painting and even packaging of the finished product. They are the costs that are directly and indirectly related to producing an item. They don’t include any costs of selling or shipping to customers, and they usually don’t include research and development costs or the vice-president of operations’ paycheck, even though you could argue that her salary could be part of the product costs—it’s too far removed from actual production.
Period costs include selling expenses and administrative expenses that are unrelated to the production process in a manufacturing business. Selling expenses are incurred to market products and deliver them to customers. Administrative expenses are required to provide support services not directly related to manufacturing or selling activities. Administrative costs may include expenditures for a company’s accounting department, human resources department, and the president’s office. Selling and administrative expenses may also include utilities, insurance, property taxes, depreciation, supplies, maintenance, salaries, etc. that are incurred in a business but outside of the factory production area.
Product Costs
Direct materials
Materials are unprocessed items used in the manufacturing process. Direct materials are those materials used only in making the product and there is a clear, easily traceable connection between the material and the product. For example, iron ore is a direct material to a steel company because the iron ore is clearly traceable to the finished product, steel. In turn, steel becomes a direct material to an automobile manufacturer.
Some materials (such as glue and thread used in manufacturing furniture) may become part of the finished product, but tracing those materials to a particular product would require more effort than is sensible. Such materials, called indirect materials or supplies, are included in manufacturing overhead. Indirect materials are materials used in the manufacture of a product that cannot, or will not for practical reasons, be traced directly to the product being manufactured. Indirect materials are part of overhead, which we will discuss below.
Direct labor
Direct labor costs include the labor costs of all employees actually working on materials to convert them into finished goods. As with direct material costs, direct labor costs of a product include only those labor costs distinctly traceable to, or readily identifiable with, the finished product. The wages paid to a construction worker, a pizza delivery driver, and an assembler in an electronics company are examples of direct labor.
Many employees receive fringe benefits paid for by employers, such as payroll taxes, pension costs, and paid vacations. These fringe benefit costs can significantly increase the direct labor hourly wage rate. Some companies treat fringe benefit costs as direct labor. Other companies include fringe benefit costs in overhead if they can be traced to the product only with great difficulty and effort.
Firms account for some labor costs (for example, wages of materials handlers, custodial workers, and supervisors) as indirect labor because the expense of tracing these costs to products would be too great. These indirect labor costs are part of overhead. Indirect labor consists of the cost of labor that cannot, or will not for practical reasons, be traced to the products being manufactured.
Overhead
In a manufacturing company, overhead is generally called manufacturing overhead. (You may also see other names for manufacturing overhead, such as factory overhead, factory indirect costs, or factory burden). Service companies use service overhead, and construction companies use construction overhead. Any of these types of companies may just use the term overhead rather than specifying it as manufacturing overhead, service overhead, or construction overhead. Some people confuse overhead with selling and administrative costs. Overhead is part of making the good or providing the service, whereas selling costs result from sales activity, and administrative costs result from running the business.
In general, overhead refers to all costs of making the product or providing the service except those classified as direct materials or direct labor. (Some service organizations have direct labor but not direct materials.) In manufacturing companies, manufacturing overhead includes all manufacturing costs except those accounted for as direct materials and direct labor. Manufacturing overhead costs are manufacturing costs that must be incurred but that cannot or will not be traced directly to specific units produced. In addition to indirect materials and indirect labor, manufacturing overhead includes depreciation and maintenance on machines and factory utility costs.
Here are more examples of manufacturing overhead costs.
- Repairs and maintenance on factory buildings and equipment
- Janitors in factory buildings
- Payroll taxes and fringe benefits for manufacturing employees
- Supervisors in factory buildings
- Depreciation on factory buildings and equipment
- Materials storeroom personnel
- Insurance and taxes on factory property and inventories
- Cost accountant salary
- Utilities for factory buildings
- Indirect raw materials, such as oil, nails, paint, small parts, etc.
Period Costs
Selling expenses
Selling expenses are costs incurred to obtain customer orders and get the finished product in the customers’ possession. Advertising, market research, sales salaries and commissions, and delivery and storage of finished goods are selling costs. The costs of delivery and storage of finished goods are selling costs because they are incurred after production has been completed. Therefore, the costs of storing materials are part of manufacturing overhead, whereas the costs of storing finished goods are a part of selling costs. Remember that retailers, wholesalers, manufacturers, and service organizations all have selling costs.
Administrative expenses
Administrative expenses are non-manufacturing costs that include the costs of top administrative functions and various staff departments such as accounting, data processing, and personnel. Executive salaries, clerical salaries, office expenses, office rent, donations, research and development costs, and legal costs are administrative costs. As with selling costs, all organizations have administrative costs.
Product Costs vs Period Costs
The timing of expenses differ for product costs and period costs. Product costs are the costs incurred in making products. These costs include the costs of direct materials, direct labor, and manufacturing overhead. They will not be expensed until the finished good are sold and appear on the income statement as cost of goods sold. Period costs are closely related to periods of time rather than units of products. For this reason, businesses expense period costs in the period in which they are incurred. Accountants treat all selling and administrative expenses as period costs for external financial reporting.
To illustrate, assume a company pays its sales manager a fixed salary. Even though the manager may be working on projects to benefit the company in future accounting periods, the company expenses the sales manager’s salary in the period incurred because the expense cannot be traced to the production of a specific product.
Here is a short review of product costs vs period costs:
You can view the transcript for “17 — Product Costs Versus Period Costs” here (opens in new window).
Key Takeaways
Product costs (direct materials, direct labor and overhead) are not expensed until the item is sold when the product costs are recorded as cost of goods sold. Period costs are selling and administrative expenses, not related to creating a product, that are shown in the income statement in the period in which they are incurred.