๐งฑ Fixed Costs
Definition: Fixed costs are costs that do not change with the level of output or sales. They stay the same whether the business produces 1 unit or 10,000 units.
- Rent for premises
- Insurance premiums
- Salaries of permanent staff
- Loan repayments
- Depreciation of equipment
Fixed costs are sometimes called 'overheads' โ they have to be paid even if the business sells nothing! ๐ข
๐ Variable Costs
Definition: Variable costs are costs that change in direct proportion to the level of output or sales. Produce more โ costs go up. Produce less โ costs go down.
- Raw materials and components
- Packaging materials
- Direct labour (piece-rate workers)
- Delivery and distribution costs
- Sales commissions
Example: A pizza restaurant's flour, cheese and toppings are variable costs โ the more pizzas it makes, the more ingredients it uses ๐
Get feedback like a real examiner
Submit your answers and get instant feedback โ what you did well, what's missing, and exactly what to write to score full marks.
โ Total Costs & Semi-Variable Costs
Total costs
Formula: Total costs (TC) = Fixed costs (FC) + Variable costs (VC)
This is one of the most fundamental formulas in business โ it tells you the complete cost of running the business at a given level of output.
Semi-variable costs
Some costs have both a fixed and a variable element. These are called semi-variable (or mixed) costs.
- Phone bills โ fixed monthly charge + variable call charges
- Electricity โ standing charge + cost per unit used
- Sales staff pay โ base salary (fixed) + commission (variable)
Semi-variable costs sit between fixed and variable โ they have a BASE cost that stays constant plus an extra part that changes with output ๐
๐ Average Cost per Unit
Formula: Average cost = Total costs รท Number of units produced
Average cost tells you how much each unit costs to produce. As output increases, fixed costs are spread over more units โ so the average cost per unit typically falls.
Example: A business has fixed costs of $10,000 and variable cost per unit of $5. If it makes 1,000 units: TC = $10,000 + (1,000 ร $5) = $15,000. Average cost = $15,000 รท 1,000 = $15 per unit. If it makes 2,000 units: TC = $10,000 + (2,000 ร $5) = $20,000. Average cost = $20,000 รท 2,000 = $10 per unit.
This is why larger businesses often have lower costs per unit โ they benefit from economies of scale! ๐
Learn what examiners really want
See exactly what to write to score full marks. Our AI shows you model answers and the key phrases examiners look for.
๐ท๏ธ Classifying Costs in Practice
In the exam, you may be given a list of costs and asked to classify them. Use this simple test:
- Does the cost change when output changes? YES โ Variable | NO โ Fixed
- Does it have both a fixed part and a changing part? โ Semi-variable
- Is the cost directly linked to each unit produced? โ Variable
- Would you still pay it if you produced zero units? โ Fixed
The zero-output test is your best friend: if the cost is still there when the factory is empty โ it's FIXED! ๐ญ