
Costs that cannot be capitalized on a company’s balance sheet
Period costs are costs that cannot be capitalized on a company’s balance sheet. In other words, they are expensed in the period incurred and appear on the income statement. Period costs are also called period expenses.
In managerial and cost accounting, period costs refer to costs that are not tied to or related to the production of inventory. Examples include selling, general and administrative (SG&A) expenses, marketing expenses, CEO salary, and rent expense relating to a corporate office. The costs are not related to the production of inventory and are therefore expensed in the period incurred. In short, all costs that are not involved in the production of a product (product costs) are period costs.
All costs incurred by a company are either period costs or product costs. Additionally, the two types of costs are recorded differently. See the table below for more comparison:
Product Costs | Period Costs | |
---|---|---|
Definition: | Costs related to the production of a product | Costs not related to the production of a product |
Method of Recording: | Capitalized on the balance sheet as inventory and eventually expensed to cost of goods sold on the income statement | Expensed on the income statement in the period incurred |
Examples: | Direct labor, direct materials, and manufacturing overhead | Marketing expense, selling, general and administrative expense, and CEO salary |
To quickly identify if a cost is a period cost or product cost, ask the question, “Is the cost directly or indirectly related to the production of products?” If the answer is no, then the cost is a period cost.
The following illustrates costs incurred by a manufacturing company in the first year of operations:
Of the items above, which are period costs that should be expensed in the period incurred?
Answer: $5,000 in rent for the company’s corporate office, $2,000 in marketing campaigns, and $20,000 in salaries related to the company’s accountants are period costs, as they do not relate to the manufacture of products. As such, the total amount of $27,000 should be expensed in the first year of operations.
When period costs are expensed, they show up on the income statement and reduce net income. Consider the following income statement:
As shown in the income statement above, salaries and benefits, rent and overhead, depreciation and amortization, and interest are all period costs that are expensed in the period incurred. On the other hand, costs of goods sold related to product costs are expensed on the income statement when the inventory is sold.
Thank you for reading CFI’s guide to Period Costs. To keep learning and developing your knowledge of financial analysis, we highly recommend the additional CFI resources below:
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