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Definition

The realized cost incurred for the work performed on an activity during a specific time period.

Simple explanation

What you actually spent for the work completed so far.

Practical Meaning [real-world Examples]

A task budgeted at $5,000 ends up costing $5,600 in labor and materials—$5,600 is the AC.

Why it matters

Enables earned value analysis; reveals cost overruns early; supports forecasting (EAC/ETC); improves financial control.

Common Mistakes

Mixing AC with committed costs; recording AC late; comparing AC to the wrong baseline; excluding internal labor; double-counting invoices.

Related Terms

Earned Value (EV), Planned Value (PV), Cost Variance (CV), Estimate at Completion (EAC), Estimate to Complete (ETC), Budget at Completion (BAC)

FAQ

Q: Is AC the same as what was invoiced?
A: Not always—AC is the cost incurred for performed work, which may differ from invoicing timing.

Q: Can AC include internal labor?
A: Yes, if your accounting system tracks it.

Q: When is AC used?
A: Continuously during execution and monitoring.

Sources & References

PMBOK® Guide – Eighth Edition, Glossary

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