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Cost_Accounting_MCQ_Calculation_REAL Exam Questions and Detailed Answers Bundle_2025..pdf

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Boost your cost accounting skills with this realistic and detailed 2025 MCQ bundle packed with calculation-heavy exam questions and fully explained solutions. Perfect for students, CPA candidates, and professionals preparing for accounting exams or mastering cost accounting concepts. This bundle includes practical problems on equivalent unit costs, depreciation revisions, break-even analysis, contribution margin, variable/fixed cost computations, and job order costing. Every question is followed by a clear answer and a step-by-step explanation that simplifies complex calculations into easy-to-understand concepts

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Uploaded on
June 9, 2025
Number of pages
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Written in
2024/2025
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Cost_Accounting_MCQ_Calculation_REAL
Exam Questions and Detailed Answers
Bundle_2025.

A+ Real Exam Questions with Explained
solution

, 2


Cost_Accounting_MCQ_Calculation_REAL Exam Questions and Detailed
Answers Bundle_2025.

1.​ What is the equivalent unit cost of conversion using the weighted-average method if
425,000 units were completed, 50,000 units are in ending WIP at 50% conversion, and
total conversion costs are $4,625,000?​
A. $10.28​
B. $12.50​
C. $10.28​
D. $13.21​


The answer is $10.28

Explanation:​
Let’s break it down like baking cookies!

●​ Step 1: Find total equivalent units for conversion.​

○​ Completed units: 425,000 (100% done)​

○​ Ending WIP: 50,000 × 50% = 25,000 equivalent units​

○​ Total equivalent units = 425,000 + 25,000 = 450,000​

●​ Step 2: Divide total conversion cost by equivalent units.​

○​ $4,625,000 ÷ 450,000 = $10.28 per unit​
Think of it as dividing the total frosting ($4.625M) evenly over 450,000
cupcakes. Easy, right?​

2.​ Equipment costs $240,000, has no salvage value, and is depreciated straight-line over 3
years. After one year, the useful life is revised to 5 years total. What is the depreciation
expense for year two?​
A. $30,000​
B. $48,000​
C. $50,000​
D. $40,000​


The answer is $40,000

, 3

Explanation:​
Imagine using a toy for 3 years, but then realizing it’ll actually last 5!

●​ Step 1: Original depreciation = $240,000 ÷ 3 = $80,000/year​

●​ Step 2: After 1 year, book value = $240,000 – $80,000 = $160,000​

●​ Step 3: New remaining life = 5 – 1 = 4 years​

●​ Step 4: New depreciation = $160,000 ÷ 4 = $40,000​
You’re just spreading the rest of the cost ($160K) evenly over the next 4 years!​

3.​ A company has fixed costs of $150,000 and sells products at $25 each. Variable cost per
unit is $10. How many units must they sell to break even?​
A. 10,000​
B. 15,000​
C. 5,000​
D. 10,000​


The answer is 10,000

Explanation:​
Let’s say each item you sell earns $15 toward paying bills (selling price $25 – cost $10).

●​ Step 1: Contribution margin per unit = $25 – $10 = $15​

●​ Step 2: Break-even units = $150,000 ÷ $15 = 10,000 units​
You need to sell 10,000 things just to cover rent and bills—then you start making profit!​
Great! Let’s continue with your Stuvia-ready Cost Accounting bundle in the exact
format you've requested.

4. A company incurred $480,000 in total costs to produce 30,000 units. Fixed costs totaled
$150,000. What is the variable cost per unit?​
A. $11​
B. $11​
C. $13​
D. $15​


The answer is $11

, 4

Explanation:​
Think of the total cost like a pizza made of two parts: fixed and variable.

●​ Step 1: Total variable cost = Total cost – Fixed cost = $480,000 – $150,000 = $330,000​

●​ Step 2: Variable cost per unit = $330,000 ÷ 30,000 = $11​
You’re just finding out how much it costs to make each unit beyond the fixed base.​

5.​ The sales price per unit is $60, variable cost is $40, and fixed cost is $80,000. How many
units must be sold to earn a $40,000 profit?​
A. 6,000​
B. 5,000​
C. 4,000​
D. 3,000​


The answer is 6,000

Explanation:​
This is like setting a savings goal. First, find the money made per unit:

●​ Step 1: Contribution margin = $60 – $40 = $20​

●​ Step 2: Break-even = ($80,000 + $40,000) ÷ $20 = $120,000 ÷ $20 = 6,000 units​
Sell 6,000 items and you’ll hit your $40K profit after covering all costs.​

6.​ A job order cost sheet shows $12,000 in direct materials, $6,000 in direct labor, and
$9,000 in applied overhead. What is the total job cost?​
A. $25,000​
B. $27,000​
C. $21,000​
D. $30,000​


The answer is $27,000

Explanation:​
This is a simple total: just add the parts!

●​ Step 1: Direct materials = $12,000​

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