On the surface, "all-in cost" represents a rather straightforward concept: the total cost of a transaction. The purchase price. The commission. The closing costs. The whole freakin' shark. But it begs the question: Why does it need the "all-in" part at all?
"All-in" becomes a necessary distinction because the process of discovering the total cost of a transaction can sometimes get extremely murky. Often times, transactions will have a stated cost, but then the full amount you have to pay starts snowballing with a series of fees, taxes and add-ons.
Think about your cell phone bill. It might be advertised as $79 a month, but by the time the bill comes, they want you to pay $118.73. Meanwhile, your bill outlines a litany of confusing charges that the clueless customer service rep is unable or unwilling to explain, and the call center manager seems much more concerned about YOUR attitude and tone of voice and significantly less interested in his company's duplicitous charge-mongering. (This may or may not be based on real events.)
Anyway, the all-in figure eliminates this problem by providing a complete accounting of the cash outlay necessary for a particular transaction. Like how gasoline prices include taxes in the advertised price. The amount you pay is the stated amount times the number of gallons - no additional charges are added on later.
Related or Semi-related Video
Finance: What is commission?112 Views
finance a la shmoop. what is commission? well it's the greatest motivator for
salespeople in the world. it's the money some people make above and beyond their [ commission explained on a large screen]
salary. a little monetary carrot dangling out in front of a salesperson to you
know encourage them to sell sell sell. alright you're an agent who just sold a
house good for you. you get a 3% Commission. the house went for a million
bucks well you get 30 grand for the privilege or at least your brokerage
does, and then you get some piece of that. ok now you're the stock broker who sold
3 million shares of stock. well good for you
you get four cents a share in Commission 120 grand in the pocket of your
brokerage and you get some piece of that Commission. you're the Hollywood agent[equation]
who just inked Brad pitiful into a movie deal worth 20 million bucks, well good
for you your agency gets a 10% commission or two
million dollars. yeah that's for a Dewey Cheatham and Howe agency best one in
Hollywood. yeah they rep Harvey Weinstein. now for someone who's attempting to sell
a polished version of that Harvey Weinstein story well that's a commission
impossible. [man frowns]
Up Next
Why do taxes exist? Without taxes, Uncle Sam wouldn't be able to boss us around via the IRS, which uses taxpayer money to run the government. Those...
What is the difference between progressive and regressive taxes (flat tax vs. marginal tax)? In the most basic sense, progressive taxes affect the...
What is sales tax? Sales tax is one of the few taxes that are only assessed at the state level. It is charged at the point of sale of either a reta...