Overheads are the ongoing costs of running a business that are not directly attributable to producing a specific product or delivering a specific service. They are also called indirect costs or operating expenses. On the income statement , overheads are deducted from gross profit to arrive at operating profit.

While cost of goods sold captures the direct costs of trading, overheads represent everything else needed to keep the business operational: the office, the people who support the business, and the systems that hold it together.

Classification of Overheads

Overheads are typically classified by function on the income statement (as required by Companies Act 2006 Format 1) or by their behaviour in relation to activity levels.

By Function

CategoryExamples
Administrative expensesOffice rent, management salaries, insurance, professional fees, office supplies
Distribution costsDelivery vehicle costs, warehousing, freight outwards, packing for dispatch
Selling expensesMarketing, advertising, sales team salaries, trade show costs
Finance costsBank charges, loan interest, overdraft interest

By Behaviour

TypeDescriptionExamples
Fixed costsStay the same regardless of outputRent, insurance, salaried staff
Variable costsChange in proportion to activityCommission, usage-based utilities
Semi-variableHave both fixed and variable elementsTelephone (line rental + call charges), electricity (standing charge + usage)

Understanding this classification is fundamental for budgeting , pricing, and break-even analysis.

Overheads on the Income Statement

Under the Companies Act 2006 Format 1 (analysis by function), overheads appear after gross profit:

Income Statement Line£
Turnover750,000
Cost of sales(300,000)
Gross profit450,000
Distribution costs(45,000)
Administrative expenses(280,000)
Operating profit125,000
Interest payable(10,000)
Profit before tax115,000

Under Format 2 (analysis by nature), the same costs are classified differently:

Income Statement Line£
Turnover750,000
Raw materials and consumables(180,000)
Staff costs(250,000)
Depreciation(40,000)
Other operating charges(155,000)
Operating profit125,000

Both formats arrive at the same operating profit, but Format 1 makes overhead categories more visible.

Common Types of Overheads

Administrative Overheads

OverheadTypical Annual Cost Range (Small UK Business)
Office rent and business rates£10,000 - £50,000
Office utilities (gas, electric, water)£3,000 - £10,000
Insurance (employer’s, public, professional)£2,000 - £15,000
Accounting and audit fees£2,000 - £20,000
Legal fees£1,000 - £10,000
IT and software subscriptions£2,000 - £15,000
Office supplies and stationery£500 - £3,000
Telephone and internet£1,000 - £5,000

Beyond direct salaries, employing staff creates additional overheads:

  • Employer’s National Insurance – 13.8% on earnings above the secondary threshold (currently £9,100)
  • Workplace pension contributions – minimum 3% of qualifying earnings
  • Training and development costs
  • Recruitment costs
  • Staff welfare – tea, coffee, social events

Depreciation

Depreciation of fixed assets used in administration (office furniture, computers, vehicles not used in production) is an overhead. It reduces operating profit but does not involve a cash outflow in the current period.

Overhead Allocation

When overheads need to be allocated to products, services, or departments for internal purposes such as management accounting , several methods can be used:

MethodBasisBest For
Direct labour hoursHours of direct labour per productLabour-intensive operations
Machine hoursHours of machine time per productCapital-intensive operations
Percentage of direct costsOverhead as a % of direct costSimple, mixed operations
Activity-based costing (ABC)Activities that drive costsComplex, multi-product businesses
Floor spaceSquare footage usedAllocating premises costs

Overhead Absorption Rate

Overhead Absorption Rate = Budgeted Overheads / Budgeted Activity Level

If budgeted overheads are £200,000 and budgeted direct labour hours are 20,000:

Rate = £200,000 / 20,000 = £10 per direct labour hour

Each product is then charged £10 for every direct labour hour it consumes.

Overheads and Pricing

To ensure prices cover all costs, businesses must factor overheads into their pricing:

Full Cost Per Unit = Direct Cost Per Unit + Allocated Overhead Per Unit

Selling Price = Full Cost Per Unit + Desired Profit Margin

If a product’s direct cost is £25 and allocated overhead is £15:

Item£
Direct materials15
Direct labour10
Allocated overhead15
Full cost40
Desired margin (25%)10
Selling price50

Overhead Ratio

The overhead ratio measures the proportion of turnover consumed by overheads:

Overhead Ratio = Total Overheads / Turnover x 100

CompanyTurnover (£)Overheads (£)Overhead Ratio
Company A500,000200,00040%
Company B500,000350,00070%

A high overhead ratio leaves less room for profit. This ratio is particularly useful when compared against industry benchmarks through financial ratio analysis.

Controlling Overheads

Regular Review

  • Compare actual overheads against budget monthly
  • Investigate variances exceeding a set threshold (e.g., 5%)
  • Challenge whether each overhead is necessary

Reduction Strategies

StrategyExample
Renegotiate contractsReview insurance, telecoms, and utility contracts annually
Consolidate suppliersFewer suppliers may yield volume discounts
Automate processesReplace manual data entry with software
Flexible workingReduce office space requirements through remote working
Outsource non-core functionsPayroll processing, IT support
Review staffingEnsure headcount matches workload

Fixed Versus Variable

Converting fixed overheads to variable where possible reduces risk. For example, using cloud-based software (pay-per-user) instead of buying server infrastructure reduces fixed commitments.

Overheads and Corporation Tax

Most overheads are tax-deductible for corporation tax purposes provided they are incurred “wholly and exclusively” for the purposes of the trade. Exceptions include:

OverheadTax Treatment
Client entertainingNot deductible
Staff entertaining (annual party, up to £150 per head)Deductible
DepreciationNot deductible (capital allowances claimed instead)
Fines and penaltiesNot deductible
Political donationsNot deductible
Business insuranceDeductible
Professional subscriptionsDeductible
Training costs (job-related)Deductible

Overheads and Cash Flow

Overheads represent a regular cash outflow that must be funded regardless of trading performance. When preparing a cash flow statement or cash forecast, overheads form the baseline of cash requirements.

Key points:

  • Depreciation is a non-cash overhead – it reduces profit but does not consume cash
  • Accruals recognise overhead costs before cash is paid
  • Prepayments recognise cash paid before the overhead is incurred
  • Seasonal businesses must budget for overhead payments during low-revenue months

Manufacturing Overheads

In a manufacturing context, overheads are split into production overheads and non-production overheads:

  • Production overheads (factory rent, factory utilities, quality control) are included in the cost of manufactured goods and therefore in the cost of goods sold and stock valuation under FRS 102 Section 13
  • Non-production overheads (office costs, selling costs) are treated as period costs and expensed on the income statement in the period incurred

This distinction affects both the balance sheet (stock valuation) and the income statement (gross profit versus operating profit).