Common Cost

Definition: A cost incurred to support multiple cost objects that cannot be traced to any of them individually.

Relationship to Indirect Costs

Common cost is a label for indirect costs when viewing granular cost objects.

Cost Direct to... Indirect (Common) to...
Factory manager salary Manufacturing division Individual beer varieties
Department head salary The department Individual products made there
Corporate headquarters The company Business units

The Causation Test

A common cost is not caused by any single cost object—it's caused by supporting the group.

The factory manager's salary exists because the factory exists, not because Premium Dry beer exists.

Allocation Challenge

Common costs must be allocated (not traced) to cost objects. This introduces subjectivity:

Allocation Base What It Assumes
Direct labor hours Products using more labor should bear more overhead
Machine hours Products using more equipment should bear more cost
Revenue Higher-revenue products should bear more cost

Different bases → different product costs → different decisions.

When Common Costs Matter

Context Relevance
Product pricing Need full cost including allocated common costs
Segment profitability Common costs may obscure true performance
Make or buy decisions Often irrelevant (won't change with decision)
Cost reduction Can't reduce by dropping one product
Common Trap

Thinking you can eliminate common costs by dropping a product. If the factory manager supports 5 products and you drop 1, the salary doesn't decrease—it just gets spread over 4 products.


North: Where this comes from

East: What opposes this?

South: Where this leads

West: What's similar?