the meaning of adverse variances and favourable variances

5.5 Budgets – Variances 🎯

Objective: Understand Adverse vs Favourable Variances

In budgeting, a variance is the difference between what you planned (budgeted) and what actually happened (actual).



Favourable variance (??

) means you performed better than planned – you spent less, earned more, or produced more than expected.



Adverse variance (❌) means you performed worse than planned – you spent more, earned less, or produced less than expected.

Quick Formula 📐

Variance = ActualBudgeted


If Variance > 0 → Favourable


If Variance < 0 → Adverse

Analogy: Road Trip 🚗

Imagine you plan a road trip and budget $200 for fuel.



• If you actually spend \$180, you saved \$20 – a favourable variance (you’re ahead of schedule).


• If you spend \$250, you overspent by \$50 – an adverse variance (you’re behind schedule).



This helps you see where you’re doing well or need to adjust.

Example Table 📊

ItemBudgeted ($)Actual ($)Variance ($)Interpretation
Sales Revenue10,00012,000+2,000Favourable ??

Marketing Cost3,0003,500-500Adverse ❌
Production Output5,000 units4,800 units-200 unitsAdverse ❌

Key Takeaway ✨

• A favourable variance shows you’re ahead of budget – great for profits or cost control.


• An adverse variance signals you need to investigate why you overspent or underperformed.


• Regularly reviewing variances helps managers make timely decisions and keep the business on track.