Welcome to Accounting For Management

Home » Controlling and Costing Materials » Average Costing Method



Average Costing Method--Materials and Inventory Costing:

Learning Objectives:

  1. Define and explain average costing method.
  2. Give an example of Average costing method.
  3. What are advantages and disadvantages of average costing.

  1. Definition and Explanation of Average Costing Method
  2. Advantages of Average Costing Method
  3. Example

Definition and explanation:

Issuing materials at an average cost assumes that each batch taken from the storeroom is composed of uniform quantities from each shipment in stock at the date of issue. Often it is not feasible to mark or label each materials item with an invoice price in order to identify the used units with its acquisition cost. It may be reasoned that units are issued more or less at random as for as the specific units and the specific costs are concerned and that an average cost of all units in stock at the time of issue is satisfactory measure of materials cost. However, average costing may be used even though the physical withdrawal is an identifiable order. If materials tend to be made up of numerous small items low in unit cost and especially if prices are subject to frequent changes.

Advantages of Average Costing Method:

Average costing method has the following main advantages:

  1. It is a realistic costing method useful to management in analyzing operating results and appraising future production.
  2. It minimizes the effect of unusually high or low materials prices, thereby making possible more stable cost estimates for future work.
  3. It is practical and less expensive perpetual inventory system.

The average costing method divides the total cost of all materials of a particular class by the number of units on hand to find the average price. The cost of new invoices are added to the total in the balance column; the units are added to the existing quantity; and the new total cost is divided by the new quantity to arrive at the new average cost. Materials are issued at the established average cost until a new purchase is recorded. Although a new average cost may be computed when materials are returned to vendors and when excess issues are returned to the storeroom, for practical purposes, it seems sufficient to reduce or increase the total quantity and cost, allowing the unit price to remain unchanged. When a new purchase is made and a new average is computed, the discrepancy created by the returns will be absorbed.

Example:

  February
(1)Beginning balance: 800 units @ $6 per unit.
(4)Received 200 units @ $7 per unit.
(10)Received 200 units @ $8 per unit.
(11)Issued 800 units.
(12)Received 400 units @ $8 per unit.
(20)Issued 500 units.
(25)Returned 100 excess units from the factory to the storeroom to be recorded at the latest issued price.
(28)Received 600 units @ $9 per unit.

Calculations for the above transactions would be as follows

Average Costing Method Calculation Illustrated

01. Beginning balance 800 units @ $6 $4,800  
04. Received 200 units @ $7 $1,400  

Balance

1000 units $6,200 $6.20
10. Received 200 units @ $8 $1,600  

Balance

12,00 units $7,800 $6.5
11. Issued 800 units @ $6.50 $5,200  

Balance

400 units $2,600 $6.5
12. Received 400 units @ $8 $3,200  

Balance

800 units $5,800 $7.25
 20. Issued 500 units @ $7.25 $3,625  

Balance

300 units $2,175 $7.25
Returned to storeroom 100 units $725  

Balance

400 units $2,900 $7.25
28. Received 600 units @ $9 $5,400  

Balance

1000 units $8,300 $8.30

You may also be interested in other relevant articles:

Materials Costing Methods:

Cost of Materials in Inventory at the end of a Period:

Costing Procedures for Scrape, waste, Spoiled Goods and Defective Work:

 

Our Request

Dear visitor! Do you like this article? If you like, then please bookmark this page and also share with your friends. Thank you for your support.

 [Report Errors and Omissions]

 

Back to Home Page | Back to Controlling and Costing Materials Page


Bookmark and Share
 


Our Message

We love our visitors and want to work for them.


Our Request

Knowledge is free for all. Please tell others about this site. Share this site at yahoo, Facebook, Google and other social sits and forums.
In this way you will encourage
accountingformanagement.com to continue writing high quality accounting articles for you.  Thank you for your support.


Managerial Accounting Articles
 
Business and Quality Improvement Programs
Cost Terms, Concepts and Classification
Job Order Costing system
Process Costing System
Process Costing System - Addition of Materials and Beginning Inventory
Controlling and Costing Materials
Materials and Inventory Cost Control
By Products and Joint Products Costing
Cost-Volume-Profit-Relationship
Variable Costing System
Activity Based Costing System
Budgeting and Planning
Standard Costing and Variance Analysis
Gross Profit Analysis
Linear Programming Technique
Segment Reporting and Transfer Pricing
Capital Budgeting Decisions
Service Department Costing
Preparing Cash Flow statement
Financial statement Analysis
Pricing Products and Services
Managerial Accounting Terms and Definitions
Managerial / Cost Accounting Formulas

Financial Accounting Articles
Bookkeeping and Bookkeeping Terms
Accounting Principles and Accounting Equation
Journal
Ledger
Accounting For Bills of Exchange
Subdivision of Journal
Final Accounts
Capital and Revenue Items
Single Entry System/Accounting From Incomplete Records
Accounting For Non-Trading Concerns
Accounting for Consignment / Consignment Accounts
Accounting for Joint Ventures
Accounting for Depreciation

Articles By International Authors

Accounting Articles

Advertisements

 
 

 
Home | Advertise With Us | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer & Terms of Use | Site map | Links | Link to us About Us | Contact Us

No text of this website can be republished without permission of the owner of this site and the authors of these managerial, management, and cost accounting articles. Otherwise sever civil and criminal penalties shall be imposed. All rights reserved.
Copy right © 2009