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A concise guide to Accrued Income, explaining how businesses recognize earned but uncollected revenue under accrual accounting.
Accrued Income is revenue earned but not yet received in cash or recorded by the end of an accounting period. It represents income that a company has earned for goods delivered or services rendered but hasn’t yet billed or collected payment for.
Accrued Income is an asset on the balance sheet representing earned revenue that is pending collection and recognition under the accrual accounting method.
Accrued income arises when goods or services have been delivered, but the customer has not yet been invoiced. Under accrual accounting, revenue must be recognized when earned, not when payment is received.
For instance, interest earned on an investment up to a balance sheet date — but not yet received — must be recorded as accrued income.
This ensures that financial statements reflect the true economic activity of a business rather than just its cash position.
Accrued Income = Income Earned − Income Received
Example:
If a company earns $10,000 in consulting revenue in December but invoices in January, it records $10,000 as accrued income in December.
A bank earns interest of $50,000 on loans for December but will receive payments in January. It records $50,000 as accrued interest income at year-end.
Similarly, investment funds report accrued interest on bonds held between coupon payment dates.
Accrued income ensures:
Economically, it reflects income that has been earned in the current production cycle but not yet monetized, improving the understanding of actual performance.
No — accrued income is earned but not yet billed; accounts receivable are invoiced amounts awaiting payment.
An asset, as it represents revenue owed to the company.
When payment is received or an invoice is issued in the next accounting period.
It ensures financial statements reflect economic activity rather than just cash movements.