Operating Costs: Definition, Formula, Types, and Examples
Operating costs are the ongoing, day-to-day expenses required to run a business. They include the direct costs of producing goods or services and the indirect costs of operating the company, but exclude non-operating expenses such as interest, financing costs, or one-time gains and losses.
Key points
- Operating cost = Cost of goods sold (COGS) + Operating expenses.
- Operating income = Revenue − Operating costs.
- Operating costs are evaluated over a reporting period (month, quarter, year) using amounts on the income statement.
- Cutting operating costs can increase short-term profits but excessive cuts may harm productivity, customer service, and long-term revenue.
How to calculate
Operating cost = Cost of goods sold (COGS) + Operating expenses
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Both components appear on the income statement. Calculate for the period you’re analyzing (e.g., quarterly or annually).
What’s included
- Cost of Goods Sold (COGS)
- Direct materials and components
- Wages and benefits for production workers
- Rent, property tax, utilities, and repairs for production facilities
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Direct production supplies and equipment maintenance
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Operating Expenses (indirect/top-level expenses)
- Salaries and benefits for administrative and executive staff
- Marketing and advertising
- Legal, accounting, and banking fees
- Rent and utilities for offices (non-production facilities)
- Travel, entertainment, and office supplies
- Non-capitalized research and development
Cost behavior: fixed, variable, and semi-variable
- Fixed costs: Do not change with production or sales volume (e.g., rent, some insurance). Fixed costs enable economies of scale because per-unit fixed cost falls as production increases—until capacity limits are reached.
- Variable costs: Change proportionally with production or sales (e.g., raw materials, piece-rate labor, production utilities).
- Semi-variable (semi-fixed) costs: Contain both fixed and variable elements (e.g., base payroll plus overtime; a service contract with minimum fees plus per-use charges).
SG&A and operating costs
Selling, general, and administrative expenses (SG&A) are a subset of operating expenses. SG&A covers costs of running and managing a business and bringing products to market (sales and delivery). Together, SG&A and COGS compose total operating costs.
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Example (illustrative)
From an income statement for a large company (fiscal year example):
– Cost of goods sold (COGS): $210.4 billion
– Operating expenses: $57.5 billion
– Total operating costs = $210.4B + $57.5B = $267.9 billion
Investors and managers track operating costs across periods and compare them to revenue to assess cost management and profitability trends.
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Bottom line
Operating costs measure the everyday expenses required to produce goods and run a business. They should be analyzed over time and in relation to revenue and other performance metrics. Efficient cost management can improve profits, but indiscriminate cuts risk undermining growth, quality, and long-term profitability.