Accruals and Deferrals

Business performance may be distorted by incorrect accruals and deferrals adjustments

In order to comply with the revenue recognition and matching principles, revenues and expenses have to be reported in the time period in which they are earned or incurred. Accruals and deferrals are instrumental in helping this proper reporting of revenues and expenses happen. Accruals and deferrals require adjusting entries at the end of the accounting period.

Accruals and deferrals occur only when a business uses accrual-based accounting methods. If accruals and deferrals are not used correctly in the accounting cycle, certain accounts may seem undervalued or overvalued.

Under the accruals, conditions are satisfied to record a revenue or expense, but money has not changed hands yet. An accrual occurs before a payment or receipt.

Under the deferrals, money has changed hands, but conditions are not yet satisfied to record a revenue or expense. A deferral occurs after a payment or receipt.

Accruals vs. Deferrals

Accrued Revenue

Accrued revenue is entered into an accounting journal once the revenue is earned regardless of whether a business has received the physical cash. For instance, if your business performs a service for a client, you have earned the revenue for that service. Before you receive the cash, the revenue is entered into an accrued revenue account. After you receive cash from your client, the accrued revenue account is decreased by the amount of cash received.

An accrual of revenues refers to the reporting of revenues and the related receivables in the period in which they are earned, and that period is prior to the period of the cash receipt. An example of the accrual of revenues is the interest earned in December on an investment in a government bond, but the interest will not be received until January.

Accrued Expenses

Accrued expenses are noted at the time they occur, regardless of whether your business has paid them. For example, you know that you have to pay employees at the end of the month before you actually write checks. The expense is entered into an accrued expenses account as a liability, then when your business writes employee checks, the accrued expense is zeroed out and cash assets decrease.

An accrual of an expense refers to the reporting of an expense and the related liability in the period in which they occur, and that period is prior to the period in which the payment is made. An example of an accrual for an expense is the electricity that is used in December, but the payment will not be made until January.

Accruals vs. Deferrals

Deferred Revenue (Unearned Revenue)

Revenue deferrals are used by accountants to spread out revenue over time. For example, your business may enter into an agreement with a client to perform a service over a period of time. However, the client may pay you the entire amount for the service up front. If this occurs, you would enter the lump payment into a deferred revenue account and spread the revenue over the fiscal period. For instance, if a customer pays $100 upfront for two months of service, you would put the $100 into a deferred revenue account and subtract $50 from the account each month. The subtracted amounts would go to your company's cash holdings.

A deferral of revenues refers to receipts in one accounting period, but they will be earned in future accounting periods. For example, the insurance company has a cash receipt in December for a six-month insurance premium. However, the insurance company will report this as part of its revenues in January through June.

Deferred Expenses (Prepaid Expenses)

Deferred expenses are spread out over the period to which they apply. When you prepay expenses -- for rent or other items -- the entire sum is taken from your assets. For example, if you pay $6,000 for six months of rent upfront, you put the $6,000 into a deferred expense account and debit the account $1,000 each month for six months. Deferring expenses helps businesses keep track of their expense cash flows and gives a more accurate picture of quarterly performance.

A deferral of an expense refers to a payment that was made in one period, but will be reported as an expense in a later period. An example is the payment in December for the six-month insurance premium that will be reported as an expense in the months of January through June.