Cost object definition
/What is a Cost Object?
A cost object is any item for which costs are being separately measured. It is a key concept used in managing the costs of a business. Several types of cost objects are noted below.
Output-Related Cost Objects
The most common cost objects are a company's products and services, since it wants to know the cost of its output for profitability analysis and price setting.
Operational Cost Objects
A cost object can be within a company, such as a department, machining operation, production line, or process. For example, you could track the cost of designing a new product, or a customer service call, or of reworking a returned product. As another example, a management team could define an entire product line as a cost object and accumulate the costs associated with it, including all associated warehousing and distribution costs; by doing so, it can gain a better understanding of the profits generated by the product line.
Business Relationship Cost Objects
A cost object can be outside of a company - there may be a need to accumulate costs for a supplier or a customer, to determine the cost of dealing with that entity. Another variation on the concept is the cost of renewing a license with a government agency.
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Accounting for Cost Objects
A cost object may be the subject of considerable ongoing scrutiny, but more commonly a company will only accumulate costs for it occasionally, to see if there has been any significant change since the last analysis. This is because most accounting systems are not designed to accumulate costs for specific cost objects, and so must be reconfigured to do so on a project basis. An annual review is common for many cost objects. If an analysis is especially complex, the review may be at an even longer interval.
It may be necessary to have a cost object in order to derive pricing from a baseline cost, or to see if costs are reasonable, or to derive the full cost of a relationship with another entity.