Assume that a regional comprehensive state university charges $500.00 per credit. Each student also pays a $1,000.00 annual fee per year. The fixed cost is $700,000.00 per year, and the variable cost per credit is $10,000.00.
If a faculty member is hired to teach 24 credits per year, calculate the breakeven number of students that the faculty member must teach.
If each course or a section is worth 3 credits, calculate how many students per class are needed to break even on the cost of offering these courses by a faculty teaching 24-credits per year.
Total Costs
Fixed cost: $700,000 per year
Variable cost: $10,000 per credit × 24 credits = $240,000
Total Cost = Fixed Cost + Variable Cost = $700,000 + $240,000 = $940,000 per year
Revenue per Student
Each student contributes revenue in two ways:
Tuition: $500/credit × 24 credits = $12,000
Annual fee: $1,000
Total Revenue per Student = Tuition + Annual Fee = $12,000 + $1,000 = $13,000 per student per year
Breakeven Number of Students
To cover the total cost, divide the total cost by the revenue per student.
Therefore, Breakeven Number of Students:
= (Total Cost)/(Revenue per Student)
= $940,000/($13,000/Students)
= 72.31 Students
Breakeven Number of Students = 73
Students per Class
The faculty member teaches 24 credits per year, with each course being 3 credits.
Number of course sections per year:
= (24 Credits)/(3 Credits/Class)
= 8 Class
Total students per year (73) divided by 8 courses:
= (73 Students)/(8 Class)
= 9.125 students/class
Rounding up, the university needs at least 10 students per course to breakeven.
Final Answer
Breakeven number of students per faculty member per year: 73 students
Students needed per course (3 credits each): 10 students
Figure 2-8 shows revenue over the number of students served by each faculty member.
Figure 2-8
University Breakeven Analysis
While total cost for each faculty member, including the variable and fixed components, does not change, the revenue earned changes over the number of students enrolled.