Proration Method of Overhead Allocation

The Proration method bases overhead allocation on your firm’s actual total overhead. With this method, the sum of all amounts is charged to overhead projects. A project, phase, or task assumes its proportionate share of the overhead pool

A project, phase, or task's overhead share is based on one of the following:
  • Its share of firmwide direct labor
  • Its share of firmwide revenue

Calculation

If the base is defined in Overhead Allocation Setup as only direct labor or revenue, Vision uses the following formula to calculate the overhead for each project:

Prorated Overhead Allocation % Rate = Year-to-Date Indirect Expenses / Year-to-Date Direct Labor or Revenue

The prorated year-to-date overhead amount is then distributed to all regular-type projects using the following formula:

% Rate * Year-to-Date Project Direct Labor or Revenue = Overhead Allocated to Project

Pros and Cons

With proration, the sum of all amounts allocated in the current period is equal to your firm’s actual overhead amount for the period. The benefit of this approach is that overhead allocation is based on real numbers. The problem is that your firm’s actual overhead amount may vary quite a bit from period to period and season to season, making it difficult to forecast project performance. To keep seasonal fluctuations to a minimum, you should consider accruing large expenses, such as professional liability insurance or depreciation, over the course of the year.

Example

For example, assume that you choose to prorate overhead based on firmwide revenue. Your firm has $100,000 in indirect expenses and $500,000 in revenue. The City Hall project has revenue for the year that totals $50,000.

Overhead Allocation Rate:

YTD Indirect Expenses (100,000) / YTD Revenue (500,000) = .20 (20%)

The overhead allocation rate is 20%.

Overhead Allocated to the City Hall Project:

% Rate (20%) * YTD Project Direct Revenue (50,000) = 10,000

The City Hall project is allocated $10,000 of overhead from the total overhead expense.