Basic Accounting Terminology

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Deferred revenue Deferred revenue (or deferred income) is a liability, such as cash received from a counterpart for goods

or services that are to be delivered in a later accounting period. When such income item is earned, the related revenue item is recognized, and the deferred revenue is reduced. It shares characteristics with accrued expense with the difference that a liability to be covered later is an obligation to pay for goods or services received from a counterpart, while cash for them is to be paid out in a later period when its amount is deducted from accrued expenses. For example, a company receives an annual software license fee paid out by a customer upfront on the January 1. However the company's fiscal year ends on May 31. So, the company using accrual accounting adds only five months worth (5/12) of the fee to its revenues in profit and loss for the fiscal year the fee was received. The rest is added to deferred income (liability) on the balance sheet for that year.

For example if a company receives $600 on December 1 in exchange for providing a monthly service from December 1 through May 31, the accountant should "defer" $500 of the amount to a liability account Unearned Revenues and allow $100 to be recorded as December service revenues. The $500 in Unearned Revenues will be deferred until January through May when it will be moved with a deferral-type adjusting entry from Unearned Revenues to Service Revenues at a rate of $100 per month. In accounting this means to defer or to delay recognizing certain revenues or expenses on the income statement until a later, more appropriate time. Revenues are deferred to a balance sheet liability account until they are earned in a later period. When the revenues are earned they will be moved from the balance sheet account to revenues on the income statement. Expenses are deferred to a balance sheet asset account until the expenses are used up, expired, or matched with revenues. At that time they will be moved to an expense on the income statement

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