Transfer Pricing
Transfer Pricing

See Also:
Service Department Costs
Responsibility Center
Profit Center
Cost Center
Cost Driver

Transfer Pricing

Transfer prices are the prices used for transactions within a company. A transfer price is an internal price. When one division of a company sells a product to another division of the same company, the price charged is called a transfer price. This is in contrast to external prices, or market prices, which are charged to customers outside the company.

In large multi-divisional corporations, where divisions are responsible for their own profits, divisions often transact with each other as if transacting with an outside customer. While internal transactions don’t affect the overall profit of the corporation, they do affect the profits of the relevant internal divisions. A high transfer price benefits the selling division to the detriment of the buying division. A low transfer price benefits the buying division to the detriment of the selling division.
The goal of the corporation is to establish transfer prices that provide incentives for divisional managers to act in the best interest of the corporation as a whole.

Transfer Price Calculation

A transfer price generally has two parts: the outlay costs and the opportunity cost. The cost of making or obtaining the product is known as the outlay cost. The opportunity cost is the profit the division could make by selling the product in the marketplace, as opposed to selling the product internally.

Transfer Price = Outlay Cost + Opportunity Cost
For example, consider a division that makes hats. The cost of making one hat is $2. That division can sell the hat in the marketplace for the market price of $5. Therefore, the opportunity cost of selling the hat internally instead of externally is $3. The transfer price would then be $5.
$5 = $2 + $3
In this simple example the transfer price is the same as the market price. In more complex examples this might not be the case. However, transfer prices are frequently based on or similar to market prices.
To learn how to price for profit, download our Pricing for Profit Inspection Guide.

[box]Strategic CFO Lab Member Extra
Access your Strategic Pricing Model Execution Plan in SCFO Lab. The step-by-step plan to set your prices to maximize profits.
Click here to access your Execution Plan. Not a Lab Member?
Click here to learn more about SCFO Labs[/box]

ARTICLES YOU MIGHT LIKE

Is Mexico the New China?

In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic and escalating tensions with China, American companies are actively seeking alternatives to mitigate their supply chain risks and reduce dependence on Chinese manufacturing. Nearshoring, the process of relocating operations closer to home, has emerged as an explosive opportunity for American and Mexican companies to collaborate like never before.

Read More »

IP Valuation & Monetization For The C-Suite

Intellectual Property (IP) defines and protects the sources of goods and services in the marketplace, the products and services offered for sale and the content surrounding such offerings.  Whether trademarks, patents, copyrights, or other IP, it is critical that C-Suite strategy drives and shapes the creation, valuation use and monetization of all its intellectual property.

Read More »

The Accounting Gap Between Large and Small Companies

The Accounting Gap: It’s unfortunate, but true. A large gap exists between the accounting departments of large or publicly traded companies and smaller or private companies. In our past 25 years of consulting we’ve noticed that more often than not, these smaller/private companies will fill the gap with Bookkeepers, rather than the degreed Accountants/CPAs they

Read More »

JOIN OUR NEXT SERIES

Financial Leadership Workshop

MARCH 28TH-31ST 2022

THE ART OF THE CFO®

Financial Leadership Workshop

Days
Hours
Min

August 7-10th, 2023

SHARE THIS ARTICLE
WIKI CFO® - Browse hundreds of articles