What is the most common method for disposing of the balance in manufacturing overhead?

Manufacturing overhead encompasses all manufacturing costs that are not attributed back to a specific job. Due to the difficulty of accurately predicting the amount of manufacturing overhead that will be used throughout the year, it is common to incur over- or underapplied manufacturing overhead at the fiscal year end. This amount must be accounted for in order to balance the financial statements.

Causes of Underapplied Manufacturing Overhead

  1. Unlike other components of job costing, such as labor and material costs, manufacturing overhead is estimated and allocated based on a predetermined overhead rate. Discrepancies occur because it is difficult to forecast. Underapplied overhead may appear when the overhead rate is not accurate, the initial estimate for a job was too low or if overhead spending wasn't monitored and controlled during job completion.

Recording Underapplied Manufacturing Overhead

  1. As a job progresses, actual overhead is recorded on the debit side of the manufacturing overhead account. Overhead costs are multiplied by the predetermined overhead rate and recorded on the credit side of the work in progress inventory account for a balancing entry. Once the products are sold, the cost of goods sold increases. Underapplied manufacturing overhead results when the actual overhead exceeds the overhead applied to the job.

Accounting Treatment of Underapplied Manufacturing Overhead

  1. The most common accounting treatment for underapplied manufacturing overhead is to close it out to cost of goods sold. This reflects the fact that the actual cost to produce the goods sold was higher than anticipated. Since the manufacturing overhead account is in a debit position, another entry is required to balance the books, so cost of goods sold is credited. Manufacturing overhead should then balance to zero.

Effect of Underapplied Manufacturing Overhead

  1. When the cost of goods sold increases, net income is reduced because there is less profit from the sale of the product. Critics of this accounting method of dealing with underapplied manufacturing overhead say it should be recorded on the income statement under cost of unused capacity to make it less complicated to see.

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  • As you’ve learned, the actual overhead incurred during the year is rarely equal to the amount that was applied to the individual jobs. Thus, at year-end, the manufacturing overhead account often has a balance, indicating overhead was either overapplied or underapplied.

    If, at the end of the term, there is a debit balance in manufacturing overhead, the overhead is considered underapplied overhead. A debit balance in manufacturing overhead shows either that not enough overhead was applied to the individual jobs or overhead was underapplied. If, at the end of the term, there is a credit balance in manufacturing overhead, more overhead was applied to jobs than was actually incurred. This shows the actual amount was overapplied overhead.

    The actual overhead costs are recorded through a debit to manufacturing overhead. The same account is credited when overhead is applied to the individual jobs in production, as shown:

    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Actual overhead costs recorded through a debit to manufacturing overhead

    Since the overhead is first recorded in the manufacturing overhead account, then applied to the individual jobs, traced through finished goods inventory, and eventually transferred to cost of goods sold, the year-end balance is eliminated through an adjusting entry, offsetting the cost of goods sold. If manufacturing overhead has a debit balance, the overhead is underapplied, and the resulting amount in cost of goods sold is understated. The adjusting entry is:

    Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\): Cost of goods sold - manufacturing overhead

    If manufacturing overhead has a credit balance, the overhead is overapplied, and the resulting amount in cost of goods sold is overstated. The adjusting entry is:

    Figure \(\PageIndex{3}\): Application of overhead to cost of goods sold

    Returning to our example, at the end of the year, Dinosaur Vinyl had actual overhead expenses of \(\$256,500\) and applied overhead expenses of \(\$250,000\), as shown:

    What is the most common method for disposing of the balance in manufacturing overhead?
    Figure \(\PageIndex{4}\): Actual overhead and applied overhead expenses

    Since manufacturing overhead has a debit balance, it is underapplied, as it has not been completely allocated. The adjusting journal entry is:

    Figure \(\PageIndex{5}\): Application of underapplied overhead to cost of goods sold

    If the overhead was overapplied, and the actual overhead was \(\$248,000\) and the applied overhead was \(\$250,000\), the entry would be:

    Figure \(\PageIndex{6}\): Application of overapplied overhead to cost of goods sold

    To adjust for overapplied or underapplied manufacturing overhead, some companies have a more complicated, three-part allocation to work in process, finished goods, and cost of goods sold. This method is typically used in the event of larger variances in their balances or in bigger companies. (You will learn more about this in future cost or advanced managerial accounting courses.)

    Example \(\PageIndex{1}\): Kraken Boardsports

    Figure \(\PageIndex{7}\): (credit: modification of images provided courtesy of Kraken Boardsports, CC BY 4.0)

    Kraken Boardsports manufactures winches for snow and ski boarders to snow ski without a mountain or water ski without a lake (Figure \(\PageIndex{7}\)). End-of-year data show these overhead expenses:

    Figure \(\PageIndex{8}\): End-of-year data for Kraken Boardsports

    Kraken Boardsports had \(6,240\) direct labor hours for the year and assigns overhead to the various jobs at the rate of \(\$33.50\) per direct labor hour. How much overhead was overapplied or underapplied during the year? What would be the journal entry to adjust manufacturing overhead?

    Solution

    The total overhead incurred is the total of:

    Figure \(\PageIndex{9}\): Total overhead for Kraken Boardsports

    The total overhead applied is \(\$209,040\), which is calculated as:

    \[\$ 33.50 \text { ldirect labor hours } \times 6,240 \text { direct labor hours} \nonumber \]

    The balance in manufacturing overhead is a debit balance of \(\$210\):

    Figure \(\PageIndex{10}\): The balance in manufacturing overhead for Kraken Boardsports

    The adjusting journal entry is:

    Figure \(\PageIndex{11}\): Manufacturing overhead for Kraken Boardsports

    What side of the manufacturing overhead account is applied manufacturing overhead entered on?

    What side of the Manufacturing overhead account is actual manufacturing overhead entered on? Applied overhead goes on the credit side. Manufacturing overhead of $120,700 was applied to production using the company's predetermined overhead rate.

    Which of the following is the most widely used method of eliminating a balance in the manufacturing overhead account?

    The more accurate method of closing out the balance in Manufacturing overhead is: closing it out to Finished goods. closing it out to Cost of goods sold. allocating it among Work in process, Finished goods, and Cost of goods sold.

    Which of the following items are included on a cost of goods manufactured report?

    To calculate the cost of goods manufactured, you must add your direct materials, direct labor, and manufacturing overhead to get your businesses' total manufacturing cost.

    When manufacturing overhead is applied to production which of the following accounts is debited?

    The overhead account is debited for the actual overhead costs as incurred. The overhead account is credited for the overhead costs applied to production in the work-in-process account.