What is the purpose of an allocation method?

Cost Allocation Example & Definition

Cost allocation is the distribution of one cost across multiple entities, business units, or cost centers. An example is when health insurance premiums are paid by the main corporate office but allocated to different branches or departments.

When cost allocations are carried out, a basis for the allocation must be established, such as the headcount in each branch or department.

Cost Allocation Methodology

A cost allocation methodology identifies what services are being provided and what these services cost. It also establishes a basis for allocating these costs to business units or cost centers based on their appropriate share of such cost.

The basis for allocating costs may include headcount, revenue, units produced, direct labor hours or dollars, machine hours, activity hours, and square footage.

Companies will often implement a cost allocation methodology as a means to control costs. Under an effective cost allocation methodology, business units become directly accountable for the services they consume. As a result, both the service provider and the respective consumers of that service become aware of service requirements and usage, and how such usage influences the costs incurred.

As business units begin seeing the cost of the services they consume, they can make more informed choices—such as trade-off decisions between service levels and costs, and benchmarking internal costs against outsourced providers.

Process for Performing Cost Allocations

Using a basis for allocation, costs are spread to each business unit or cost center that incurred the cost based on their proportional share of the cost. For example, if headcount forms the basis of allocation for insurance costs, and there are 1000 total employees, then a department with 100 employees would be allocated 10% of the insurance costs.

While there are numerous ways cost allocations can be calculated, it is important to ensure the reasoning behind them is documented. This is often done by establishing allocation formulas or tables.

Once the calculation is established and cost distributions are calculated, journal entries are created to transfer costs from the providing or paying entity to the appropriate consuming entities. During each financial period, as periodic expenses are incurred, this calculation is repeated and allocating entries are made.

What Does a Cost Allocation System Do?

A cost allocation system consists of a way to track which entity within an organization provides a product and/or service, the entity that consumes the products and/or services, and a means of distributing this cost from the provider to the consumer or consumers. Depending on the operating structure of the company, the cost allocation may be performed by internal invoice, through a chargeback module in the ERP system, or more commonly, through journal entries performed by accounting staff each financial period.

BlackLine's Cost Allocation Solution

BlackLine Journal Entry and BlackLine Transaction Matching work together to form a complete cost allocation system.

BlackLine’s Journal Entry Management system provides an automated solution for the creation, review, approval, and posting of journal entries. For cost allocations, allocation tables based on specified percentages or set dollar amounts can be created or imported into the product.

BlackLine Transaction Matching provides automated analysis of transaction details between any data source. Once the allocation tables are established in the solution, the technology pulls in data from expense accounts, matches it to the allocation table, and then distributes transaction amounts based on the allocation table.

This integrates with the Journal Entry solution to automatically create all associated journal entries. In addition, any changes made to the allocation table are tracked and visible in an audit trail and applied to all future generated journals.

This cost allocation system saves significant time by freeing accountants from performing cost allocation calculations each period, manually preparing journal entries, and maintaining allocation tables.

Read this ebook to discover ten more ways that BlackLine Transaction Matching will help you save time—and restore your sanity.

The process of identifying, accumulating, and assigning costs to costs objects

What is Cost Allocation?

Cost allocation is the process of identifying, accumulating, and assigning costs to costs objects such as departments, products, programs, or a branch of a company. It involves identifying the cost objects in a company, identifying the costs incurred by the cost objects, and then assigning the costs to the cost objects based on specific criteria.

What is the purpose of an allocation method?

When costs are allocated in the right way, the business is able to trace the specific cost objects that are making profits or losses for the company. If costs are allocated to the wrong cost objects, the company may be assigning resources to cost objects that do not yield as much profits as expected.

Types of Costs

There are several types of costs that an organization must define before allocating costs to their specific cost objects. These costs include:

1. Direct costs

Direct costs are costs that can be attributed to a specific product or service, and they do not need to be allocated to the specific cost object. It is because the organization knows what expenses go to the specific departments that generate profits and the costs incurred in producing specific products or services. For example, the salaries paid to factory workers assigned to a specific division is known and does not need to be allocated again to that division.

2. Indirect costs

Indirect costs are costs that are not directly related to a specific cost object like a function, product, or department. They are costs that are needed for the sake of the company’s operations and health. Some common examples of indirect costs include security costs, administration costs, etc. The costs are first identified, pooled, and then allocated to specific cost objects within the organization.

Indirect costs can be divided into fixed and variable costs. Fixed costs are costs that are fixed for a specific product or department. An example of a fixed cost is the remuneration of a project supervisor assigned to a specific division. The other category of indirect cost is variable costs, which vary with the level of output. Indirect costs increase or decrease with changes in the level of output.

3. Overhead costs

Overhead costs are indirect costs that are not part of manufacturing costs. They are not related to the labor or material costs that are incurred in the production of goods or services. They support the production or selling processes of the goods or services. Overhead costs are charged to the expense account, and they must be continually paid regardless of whether the company is selling goods or not.

Some common examples of overhead costs are rental expenses, utilities, insurance, postage and printing, administrative and legal expenses, and research and development costs.

Cost Allocation Mechanism

The following are the main steps involved when allocating costs to cost objects:

1. Identify cost objects

The first step when allocating costs is to identify the cost objects for which the organization needs to separately estimate the associated cost. Identifying specific cost objects is important because they are the drivers of the business, and decisions are made with them in mind.

The cost object can be a brand, project, product line, division/department, or a branch of the company. The company should also determine the cost allocation base, which is the basis that it uses to allocate the costs to cost objects.

2. Accumulate costs into a cost pool

After identifying the cost objects, the next step is to accumulate the costs into a cost pool, pending allocation to the cost objects. When accumulating costs, you can create several categories where the costs will be pooled based on the cost allocation base used. Some examples of cost pools include electricity usage, water usage, square footage, insurance, rent expenses, fuel consumption, and motor vehicle maintenance.

What is a Cost Driver?

A cost driver causes a change in the cost associated with an activity. Some examples of cost drivers include the number of machine-hours, the number of direct labor hours worked, the number of payments processed, the number of purchase orders, and the number of invoices sent to customers.

Benefits of Cost Allocation

The following are some of the reasons why cost allocation is important to an organization:

1. Assists in the decision-making process

Cost allocation provides the management with important data about cost utilization that they can use in making decisions. It shows the cost objects that take up most of the costs and helps determine if the departments or products are profitable enough to justify the costs allocated. For unprofitable cost objects, the company’s management can cut the costs allocated and divert the money to other more profitable cost objects.

2. Helps evaluate and motivate staff

Cost allocation helps determine if specific departments are profitable or not. If the cost object is not profitable, the company can evaluate the performance of the staff members to determine if a decline in productivity is the cause of the non-profitability of the cost objects.

On the other hand, if the company recognizes and rewards a specific department for achieving the highest profitability in the company, the employees assigned to that department will be motivated to work hard and continue with their good performance.

Additional Resources

Thank you for reading CFI’s guide to Cost Allocation. In order to help you become a world-class financial analyst and advance your career to your fullest potential, these additional resources will be very helpful:

  • Break-Even Analysis
  • Cost of Production
  • Fixed and Variable Costs
  • Projecting Income Statement Line Items

What is the purpose of an allocation method in research?

Allocation methods, such as the ones described above, are used to assign participants to two or more study groups (e.g., treatment and control groups). Usually, the allocation is used to remove confounders.

What is the purpose of an allocation?

An allocation is the process of shifting overhead costs to cost objects, using a rational basis of allotment. Allocations are most commonly used to assign costs to produced goods, which then appear in the financial statements of a business in either the cost of goods sold or the inventory asset.

What is an allocation method?

Allocation Methods If a cost solely benefits one funding source, it should be charged entirely to that funding source. If a cost benefits more than one funding source, the cost should be charged to each funding source in the same proportion as it provides benefit.