Accounting



What is the difference between a cost and an expense?

Before we answer your question, you should keep in mind that many people use these terms interchangeably and will not make the distinction that we show below.

We will illustrate the terminology problem with the following example. Let’s say your company is in the catering business and will cater its biggest event this evening. In the morning your company purchased about 125% of the paper goods that you believe will be used at the event. (You purchased the additional 25% for future events and also to ensure you don’t run out of these items at this evening’s event.) The paper goods that were purchased had a cost of $500, and only $400 of the paper items were used at today’s event. The remaining $100 were put in your company’s store room for use at the events to be catered in the next few weeks. In this example, the cost of $500 consisted of a $400 expense and a $100 asset.

Accountants use the term expense to mean a cost that has being used up while a company is doing its main revenue-generating activities. (That’s why only $400 of the cost of supplies was expensed in our example.)

A cost may or may not be an expense. As we had seen above, $400 of the cost was an expense and $100 of the cost was an asset. Here is a more extreme example: If a company purchases land to be used in its business, the cost of the land will be reported an asset and will never become an expense. (The reason is that land will never be used up and therefore never depreciated.) The land’s entire cost will continue to be reported on the balance sheet as the asset Land as long as the company owns the land.

If a company purchases a delivery truck to be used in its business, the truck’s cost will initially be recorded as the asset Delivery Truck on the company’s balance sheet. However, the truck’s cost will become Depreciation Expense as the truck is “used up” in the company’s main, revenue-generating activities.

Manufacturing companies offer additional insights. The cost of the direct labor used to manufacture a product is a cost of the product. If the product is not sold, the entire cost of the product (including the direct labor component) is reported as an asset. When the product is sold, the cost of the product that is sold will be reported as the expense known as the cost of goods sold (which is matched with sales) on the income statement. The wages paid to the driver of the manufacturer’s delivery truck is reported immediately as an expense, since this cost is not part of a product’s cost—it is part of selling the product. Electricity in the factory is part of the products’ cost and will not become an expense until the products are sold. Electricity in the offices outside of the factory (sales and marketing, general administrative offices) are reported immediately as expenses in the accounting period that they are used. Cost outside of the factory do not become part of the products’ cost.

Many authors of managerial and cost accounting textbooks add to the terminology problem when they say the break-even point occurs at the point where sales equal fixed costs plus variable costs. Perhaps there is some benefit in brevity, but I would prefer to say that the break-even point occurs at the point where revenues are equal to fixed costs and expenses and variable costs and expenses. There’s a semantics problem with my preference as well.

I hope this sheds some light on the use of the words cost and expense. In 1985 the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued its Concepts Statement No. 6, Elements of Financial Statements, which defines terms such as expenses, losses. revenues, assets, etc. You can read that statement by going to www.fasb.org. In the panel on the left-side of the home page, select Pronouncements & EITF Abstracts.

the accounting coach

About the Author: Harold Averkamp (CPA) has worked as an accountant, consultant, and university accounting instructor for more than 25 years.

He is the author of the 2010 Master Accounting Download Package which has been praised for it's ability to simplify accounting in a way that anybody can understand.




Comments

23 Responses to “What is the difference between a cost and an expense?”

  1. A/naafac Sheikh Mukhtar on May 18th, 2007 8:20 am

    how can i make worksheet?

  2. A/naafac Sheikh Mukhtar on May 18th, 2007 8:31 am

    How do I calculate the cost of goods sold for a manufacturing company?

  3. Sarva on October 9th, 2007 3:59 am

    I really appreciate the clarity of the explanation provided for the difference in the terms Costs and Expense. Though being an accountant myself I never thought of it the way you explained. I may not be the first accountant to do this but at least I shall use these terms more appropriately in the future.

  4. Maqsood on April 4th, 2008 3:01 am

    Plz send me accounting information about new standard updation.

  5. lubna on December 14th, 2008 9:29 am

    hello……i wanted to kno how to pass the journal entry if my transaction is
    15000 withdrawl from bank
    13000 deposited in locker
    2000 cash expenses
    please explain and send as soon as possible
    thank u

  6. melku on December 24th, 2008 5:25 am

    cash—————15000
    banck diposit———15000

    banck diposit——–13000
    cash——————–13000

    expence—————2000
    cash————————-2000

  7. Hira on February 16th, 2009 9:33 am

    wts major differece b/w cost &advance account?

  8. sabitha on March 9th, 2009 2:54 am

    I what to know difference between common size statments and compartive statments, and difference between income statment and balance sheet

  9. vineet pandey on March 12th, 2009 12:38 am

    hi..
    i want to know how to calculate production cost from the annual sheet or from financial statements of any oil & gas company

  10. Gary on October 9th, 2009 7:57 pm

    Thanks for the clear and concise explanation! I had always wondered what the difference is and your article makes it completely clear. Well done!

  11. Jenny on December 21st, 2009 3:17 pm

    Cost & expenses

    A nice explanation, but need some editing to make it simpler, see below

    Edited Version
    ——————-
    The paper plates purchased for a cost of $500.

    Only $400 of the paper items were used at today’s event.

    The remaining $100 were put in your store room

    In this example, the cost of $500 consisted of a $400 expense and a $100 asset.

    Accountants use the term expense to mean a cost that has being used up

  12. Dabster on January 26th, 2010 12:38 am

    How can i Prepare Cash flow statement.

  13. ACoach on January 26th, 2010 7:18 am

    See Explanation of Cash Flow Statement on AccountingCoach.com. There is no cost to read the materials on the website.

  14. zulfiqar ali on February 12th, 2010 2:07 am

    hi
    i was extremely confused in cost and expense i am realy thankful for solving this problen .the example of land was superb

  15. Ather on April 1st, 2010 2:48 am

    what is the difference between cost and expense?

  16. afeez on May 3rd, 2010 6:06 am

    pls i need the differences btw oil and gas accounting and manufacturing companies accounting

  17. Atif Siddiqui on August 11th, 2010 10:31 am

    good post. I got really confused b/w expense and cost.

  18. Cristy on August 14th, 2010 10:03 am

    Is tax a cost?

  19. shani on August 19th, 2010 11:32 am

    The money you spend on long tem projects is called cost . e.g build a house for commercial use .

    The money you spend on short tem obligations is called expense . e.g buy a note book .

  20. shani on August 19th, 2010 11:33 am

    no tax is your expense becauze the money is going frm ur hand

  21. sadia on August 26th, 2010 9:28 am

    why “goods sent on consignment” account close in cost of goods sold in manufacturing company accounts and in purchases in merchandising company?

  22. mukesh on September 7th, 2010 12:42 pm

    don’t post rubish thing like this i t;s totally absurd bole to bakwash

  23. Bob MarJun on September 8th, 2010 12:16 am

    I finally got the answer of my homework…by the question..Not all expenses is a cost,and not all cost is expenses….Thanks..a lot..yoou give us a lot of examples…great…

Leave a Reply