A bakery incurs $2,000 per day in fixed costs (rent, equipment, insurance) and $1 in variable costs per loaf of bread. If it bakes 1,000 loaves, its ATC is ($2,000 + $1,000) ÷ 1,000 = $3.00 per loaf. If it bakes 2,000 loaves, its ATC falls to ($2,000 + $2,000) ÷ 2,000 = $2.00 per loaf — the fixed cost is spread over more output. If it tries to bake 4,000 loaves, the ovens run at capacity, staff work overtime, and variable cost per loaf rises to $1.50 — ATC = ($2,000 + $6,000) ÷ 4,000 = $2.00. The minimum ATC was at some middle quantity — the point where spreading fixed costs and rising variable costs balance.
The formula
Average Total Cost (ATC) = Total Cost (TC) ÷ Quantity (Q)
Since TC = Fixed Costs + Variable Costs:
ATC = AFC + AVC
Where AFC is average fixed cost (FC ÷ Q, always declining) and AVC is average variable cost (VC ÷ Q, typically U-shaped).
Reading the result
ATC has a characteristic U-shape:
Falling portion: fixed costs are being spread over more output. AFC declines as Q rises, pulling ATC down even if AVC is flat or rising slowly.
Rising portion: diminishing returns drive up variable costs per unit faster than the spreading of fixed costs lowers them. AVC rises faster than AFC falls.
Minimum ATC: the bottom of the U is where spreading fixed costs and rising variable costs exactly balance. This is the most efficient scale of production.
The price-ATC relationship determines profitability:
- P > ATC: firm earns economic profit (above-normal returns)
- P = ATC: firm earns zero economic profit (normal returns; breaks even including opportunity costs)
- P < ATC: firm incurs economic loss (below-normal returns; consider exiting in the long run)
The Bureau of Economic Analysis industry profit data shows aggregate profitability across industries — sectors where prices persistently exceed ATC (pharmaceuticals, software, financial services) versus sectors where price barely covers ATC (retail, agriculture, commodity manufacturing).
Worked example
An airline has fixed costs of $50 million per route per year (aircraft, crew training, gate fees). Variable costs are $100 per passenger (fuel, per-passenger fees). At 200,000 passengers per year: ATC = ($50M + $20M) ÷ 200,000 = $350 per passenger. At 300,000 passengers: ATC = ($50M + $30M) ÷ 300,000 = $267 per passenger. The airline aggressively seeks to fill seats because each additional passenger dramatically lowers ATC across the fixed cost base — the classic high-fixed-cost airline economics.
Why it matters
ATC is the profitability benchmark. A firm that prices above its ATC is sustainable. One that prices below it is either building market share (acceptable short-term) or headed for exit (unsustainable long-term). In perfectly competitive markets, ATC sets the long-run equilibrium price — competition drives price down to minimum ATC as entry eliminates economic profits.





