What It Is:
Accounts receivable (A/R) are amounts owed by customers for goods and services a company allowed the customer to purchase on credit.
How It Works/Example:
Let's assume that Company XYZ sells $1,000,000 of widget parts to a widget manufacturer and gives that customer 60 days to pay for those parts. Once Company XYZ receives the order and/or sends the parts and/or sends the customer an invoice, it will decrease its inventory account by $1,000,000 and increase its accounts receivable by $1,000,000. When 60 days has passed and Company XYZ is paid, it will increase cash by $1,000,000 and reduce its accounts receivable by $1,000,000.
A/R is an asset, and as such, it appears on the balance sheet. In particular, A/R is a current asset, meaning that the amount owed is expected to be received within the next 12 months.
Why It Matters:
Accounts receivable is an important factor in a company's working capital. If it's too high, the company may be lax in collecting what's owed too it and may soon be struggling to find the cash to pay the bills; if it's too low, the company may be unwisely harming customer relationships or not offering competitive payment terms. In general, accounts receivable leciels correspond to changes in sales levels.
Companies can sometimes use their receivables as collateral for borrowing money. The level of accounts receivable also affects several important financial-performance measures, including working capital, days payable, the current ratio, and others.
It is important to note that uncollectible receivables do not qualify as assets (these uncollectible amounts are reclassified to the allowance for doubtful accounts, which is essentially a reduction in receivables); thus, companies usually allow only creditworthy customers to pay days, weeks, or even months after they've received the company's services or goods. Sometimes companies sell their receivables for cents on the dollar to other companies that focus solely on collecting the owed amounts.
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A grandfather clause is a clause that is included as part of a new law that exempts specific parties from the law due to practices that were in place prior to the law's implementation.




