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Accounting Basics for Beginners Day 8 of 50 days accounting challenge

Cash vs Accrual — Which Basis Shows the True Profit? A Complete Guide with Numerical Example

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Accounting Basics for Beginners Day 8 of 50 days accounting challenge
Accounting Basics for Beginners Day 8 of 50 days accounting challenge
Bases of Accounting – Cash Basis vs Accrual Basis | Day 8 | CA Devesh Thakur
📖 Day 8 · 50 Days Accounting Challenge

Bases of Accounting
Cash Basis vs Accrual Basis

When to record income & expense — and which basis shows True & Fair profit?

by CA Devesh Thakur
📅 Series: Day 8 of 50 📗 Topic: Bases of Accounting 🌐 etaxsave.com

📝 Handwritten Class Note

CA Devesh Thakur’s handwritten note for Day 8 — save it for quick revision!


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🎬 Watch Day 8 Reel on Instagram

Reel

Bases of Accounting — Day 8

@cadeveshthakur.official

Cash Basis vs Accrual Basis — when to record income & expense, with full numerical: Net Profit ₹1,50,000 vs ₹3,00,000. Day 8 of 50 Days Accounting Challenge 💡

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Day 8: Bases of Accounting

In Day 7 we learned the rules (Accounting Standards). Today in Day 8, we learn one of the most fundamental questions in accounting: When do we record income and expenses? The answer depends on which “basis” you follow — Cash Basis or Accrual Basis. This choice directly impacts how much profit your books show. Let’s understand both with a complete numerical example! 💡

⚖️ The Two Bases of Accounting

💵
Cash Basis
Entry trigger: Jab paisa aaya / gaya

Jab hum sirf “Cash aane ya jaane” par entry karte hain. Iska matlab — agar paisa actually haath mein aaya tabhi income record karenge, aur paisa haath se gaya tabhi expense record karenge.

“Income tabhi record hogi jab paisa haath mein milta hai — aur expense tab jab paisa haath se jaata hai.”
⚠️ Limitation: “Ye True profit nahi dikhata” — kyunki jitna kaam ho gaya hai ya kharcha lag chuka hai par cash nahi hua, wo ignore ho jaata hai.
📋
Accrual Basis
Entry trigger: Jab Income earn hui / Expense lagi

Income ya expense ko us time record karte hain jab wo earn ya incur hota hai — chahe payment baad mein aaye ya jaaye. Cash movement se koi fark nahi padta.

“Agar aapne kaam karke paisa kamaya hai to wo Income maan li jaati hai — chahe payment baad mein mile.”

📌 Example: December mein service di, payment January mein aayegi — Accrual Basis mein December mein hi income record hogi. Cash Basis mein January mein.

Advantage: True & fair financial position dikhata hai — isliye globally accepted hai.

⏱️ When Does Entry Happen?

💵 Cash Basis — Entry Timing
📥 Income → Tabhi jab cash actually mila (haath mein aaya)
📤 Expense → Tabhi jab cash actually diya (haath se gaya)
📋 Accrual Basis — Entry Timing
📥 Income → Jab earn hua (service di / goods becha) — cash baad mein aaye
📤 Expense → Jab incur hua (lagaa) — cash baad mein jaaye
💡

Key Insight — Why Accrual is Better

Cash Basis ignores credit sales, outstanding expenses, and prepaid amounts — giving a distorted picture of profit. Accrual Basis captures all economic activity of the period, making it the standard used in financial reporting worldwide. India’s Companies Act mandates Accrual Basis for companies.

🔢 Numerical Example — Same Data, Different Results

📌 Given Information

💰 Cash Sales
₹4,00,000
Customers ne cash diya
📄 Credit Sales
₹2,00,000
Udhar pe maal becha — cash baad mein milega
💸 Total Expenses (for the year)
₹3,00,000
Pura saal ka kharcha
⏳ Outstanding Expenses (OIs)
₹50,000
Expense hua par cash abhi tak nahi diya

💵 Cash Basis

Sirf cash transactions count

Income Sirf Cash Sales
₹4,00,000
Less: Expenses Sirf jo Cash mein pay hua
Total Expenses ₹3,00,000
Less: Outstanding (not paid yet) −₹50,000
Cash Expenses Paid
₹2,50,000
Net Profit
₹1,50,000

📋 Accrual Basis

All earned income & incurred expenses

Income Cash + Credit Sales
Cash Sales ₹4,00,000
Credit Sales +₹2,00,000
Total Income
₹6,00,000
Less: Expenses Pura saal ka (including outstanding)
₹3,00,000
Net Profit
₹3,00,000

📊 Same Business — Two Different Profits!

Exactly the same business transactions — but two completely different Net Profit figures depending on the basis used. This is why the choice of accounting basis matters enormously.

Cash Basis ₹1,50,000
vs
Accrual Basis ₹3,00,000

Difference of ₹1,50,000 — because Cash Basis ignores ₹2,00,000 credit sales and ₹50,000 outstanding expenses.

⚠️

Why Cash Basis shows Lower Profit here

Cash Basis ignores the ₹2,00,000 credit sales (income not received yet) — reducing income from ₹6L to ₹4L. But it also ignores ₹50,000 outstanding expenses (not yet paid) — reducing expense from ₹3L to ₹2.5L. Net effect: profit is ₹1,50,000 instead of ₹3,00,000. Neither is “wrong” — but Accrual shows the true picture of what was earned & spent in the period.

🔗

Connection with Previous Days

Day 3: Revenue Receipt vs Capital Receipt — in Accrual Basis, credit sales are Revenue Receipts even before cash comes in.
Day 5: Debtors (Trade Receivables) = Credit sales under Accrual Basis that are yet to be collected.
Day 7: Accounting Standards mandate Accrual Basis — AS 1 (Disclosure of Accounting Policies) requires stating which basis is followed.

📊 Quick Summary — Cash Basis vs Accrual Basis

FeatureCash BasisAccrual Basis
Entry TriggerJab cash aaya / gayaJab earn hua / incur hua
Income Recorded WhenCash haath mein milaService di / goods becha — cash baad mein aaye
Expense Recorded WhenCash haath se gayaExpense laga — cash baad mein jaaye
Credit SalesIgnored (not recorded)Recorded as income immediately
Outstanding ExpensesIgnored (not recorded)Recorded as expense in the period
Shows True Profit?❌ No — incomplete picture✅ Yes — True & Fair financial position
In This ExampleNet Profit = ₹1,50,000Net Profit = ₹3,00,000
Used BySmall businesses, individualsCompanies (mandated by law), most businesses

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