Answer

What is variance analysis?

Variance analysis compares actual results to your budget and explains the gap. It turns raw numbers into decisions — showing whether a shortfall is a sales problem, a cost problem or a timing problem.

2 min read

Actual vs planWhat it compares
Explains gapsNot just flags
Drives actionThe point

What it means

Variance analysis sits each actual figure next to its budgeted figure and asks why they differ. A sales variance shows whether volume or price moved; a cost variance shows whether you overspent or a supplier price changed. Splitting the gap into causes is what makes it useful — it tells you which lever to pull, not just that something is off.

What this means for your company

Run it monthly as part of your management accounts, comparing to the budget. An unfavourable variance caught early can be fixed while there is still time — chase sales, trim a cost, or arrange short-term finance for a genuine timing gap. Directors who ignore variances discover the problem only when the cash runs out.

What it means for you

Credicorp lends to your company, not to you personally, and takes no personal guarantee. See business loans or apply online.

Frequently asked questions

What is a favourable versus unfavourable variance?

A favourable variance means actuals are better than budget (higher income or lower cost); unfavourable means worse. Both are worth understanding — even a favourable variance can flag that the budget was unrealistic.

How detailed should variance analysis be?

Enough to find the cause and act. For a small company, splitting sales and main cost lines against budget monthly is usually plenty. Over-detailed analysis wastes time you could spend fixing the variance.

Funding for UK limited companies

Credicorp lends to your company, not to you personally — short-term working capital with no personal guarantee. See what your business could access.