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Accounting Basics for Beginners Day 4 of 50 days accounting challenge

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Accounting Basics for Beginners Day 4 of 50 days accounting challenge
Accounting Basics for Beginners Day 4 of 50 days accounting challenge
Basic Accounting Terms Part 4 – Revenue, Income, Profit, Gain & Loss | Day 4 | CA Devesh Thakur
📖 Day 4 · 50 Days Accounting Challenge

Basic Accounting Terms
Part – 4 · Revenue, Income,
Profit, Gain & Loss

Understanding every line of an Income Statement — from Sales to Adjusted Income

by CA Devesh Thakur
📅 Series: Day 4 of 50 📗 Topic: P&L Concepts 🌐 etaxsave.com

📝 Handwritten Class Note

CA Devesh Thakur’s handwritten note for Day 4 — save it for quick revision!


🎬 Watch Day 4 Reel on Instagram

Reel

Basic Accounting Terms – Part 4

@cadeveshthakur.official

Revenue, Income, Profit, Gain & Loss — complete Income Statement walkthrough with real numbers. Day 4 of 50 Days Accounting Challenge 📊

▶  Watch on Instagram

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Day 4: Revenue, Income, Profit, Gain & Loss

In Day 3 we mastered Receipts & Expenditure. Today in Day 4, we go through five closely related but distinctly different terms — Revenue, Income, Profit, Gain, and Loss — and see exactly how they flow through a real Income Statement with actual numbers. This is the heart of every P&L Account! 📊

💰 Revenue
📥 Income
📈 Profit
✅ Gain
📉 Loss

📖 Key Definitions

💰

Revenue

Business ki main operations se earned paisa — goods selling ya services provide karne se. Yeh business ka primary income source hai.

📌 Example: Sales Revenue ₹1,20,000 from selling goods/services
📥

Income

Broader term — Revenue + any other earnings (like interest received, rent received). Income = Revenue + Other Income sources.

📌 Total Income = Net Profit ₹28,000 + Gain ₹5,000 = ₹33,000
📈

Profit

Jab Revenue ya Income, Expenses se zyada hoti hai tab profit hota hai. Do types: Gross Profit (Revenue − COGS) and Net Profit (G.P − Indirect Expenses).

📌 Gross Profit = ₹1,20,000 − ₹80,000 = ₹40,000 | Net Profit = ₹28,000

Gain

Profit jo incidental ya non-regular activities se arise hota hai — yeh business ki main operations se nahi hota. Ek off-type benefit.

📌 Example: Sale of old furniture — ₹5,000 gain (not main business activity)
📉

Loss

Jab koi asset book value se neeche bika ho — ya jab total expenses income se zyada ho. Yeh income reduce karta hai.

📌 Example: Machinery sold below book value — ₹3,000 loss deducted from income
💡

Gain vs Profit — Key Difference

Profit arises from the main business operations (selling goods/services). Gain arises from incidental or non-regular activities (like selling an old asset). Both are positive — but they have different origins!

🧾 Complete Income Statement Walkthrough

Income Statement — As per CA Devesh Thakur’s Note

A step-by-step breakdown of every line with amounts in ₹

Sales Revenue Revenue Earned by selling goods / services
₹1,20,000
Less: —
Cost of Goods Sold (C.O.G.S) Direct Cost Cost incurred to produce goods sold — Raw Material, Direct Labor, Mfr. Expenses
(₹80,000)

Gross Profit  [Revenue − C.O.G.S] Gross Profit
₹40,000
Less: —
Indirect Expenses Operating Cost Rent, Electricity, Salaries, Admin Expenses
(₹12,000)

Net Profit  [G.P + Ind.Exp + Oth. Inc.] Net Profit
₹28,000
Add: ↑
Gain — Sale of Old Furniture Gain Profit from incidental / non-regular activities
₹5,000

Total Income
₹33,000
Less: —
Loss — Sale of Machinery Loss Asset sold below Book Value
(₹3,000)

✅ Adjusted Income
₹30,000

🔍 Concept Deep Dives

💰 What is COGS (Cost of Goods Sold)?

COGS woh direct cost hai jo goods produce karne mein lagti hai. Isme teen cheezein aati hain: Raw Material (RM) — maal banana ka kachcha saman; Direct Labor — directly production mein lage workers ki salary; aur Manufacturing Expenses (Mfr. Exp) — factory mein production ke direct kharche. COGS = Sales Revenue se sidha ghataate hain, to Gross Profit milta hai.

📊 Gross Profit vs Net Profit

Gross Profit = Revenue − COGS — Yeh sirf production cost nikalne ke baad bacha paisa hai. Isme indirect expenses abhi nahi ghate.

Net Profit = Gross Profit − Indirect Expenses — Ab rent, electricity, salaries jaise sab operating kharche ghataane ke baad jo bachta hai woh Net Profit hai. Net Profit business ki actual profitability dikhata hai.

✅ Gain — Incidental Profit

Gain tab hota hai jab business koi non-regular activity se paisa kamata hai — jaise purana furniture ya equipment bechna. Yeh main business operations ka hissa nahi hai. Gain ko Net Profit mein add karte hain kyunki yeh ek extra positive inflow hai. Example: Purana furniture ₹5,000 mein becha → Gain = ₹5,000.

📉 Loss — Asset Sold Below Book Value

Loss tab hota hai jab koi asset uski book value se kam price par bichi ho. Book value = original cost − depreciation. Agar machinery ki book value ₹10,000 thi aur ₹7,000 mein bichi, to ₹3,000 ka loss. Yeh loss Total Income se ghataate hain, jo Adjusted Income deta hai.

📥 Income vs Revenue — The Difference

Revenue sirf main business se aata hai (Sales). Income ek wider term hai — isme Revenue + Gains + any other earnings shamil hain. Isliye note mein pehle Net Profit (₹28,000) hai, phir Gain add hota hai (₹5,000) aur Total Income (₹33,000) banta hai — Income = Profit + Gain.

⚠️

Common Exam Mistake

Many students confuse Gross Profit and Net Profit. Remember: Gross Profit only deducts direct costs (COGS). Net Profit additionally deducts indirect expenses (Rent, Salary, Admin). Always check which level of profit is being asked!

🔗

Connection with Previous Days

Day 2: COGS uses Raw Materials (Current Assets → Inventory).
Day 3: Indirect Expenses = Revenue Expenditure. Machinery purchase = Capital Expenditure — its sale at a loss creates the “Loss” entry here.
Day 3: Gain from selling old furniture = Capital Receipt (non-recurring).

📊 Quick Summary — All 5 Terms + Statement Flow

TermDefinitionIn StatementAmount (₹)
Revenue (Sales)Income from main business — selling goods/servicesStarting point1,20,000
COGSDirect cost to produce goods — RM, Labor, Mfr. ExpDeducted from Revenue(80,000)
Gross ProfitRevenue minus COGSRevenue − COGS40,000
Net ProfitGross Profit minus Indirect ExpensesG.P − Indirect Exp28,000
GainProfit from incidental / non-regular activitiesAdded to Net Profit+5,000
Total IncomeNet Profit + GainSubtotal33,000
LossAsset sold below book valueDeducted from Total Income(3,000)
Adjusted IncomeTotal Income minus LossFinal figure30,000

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