Why Do We Need Liabilities?
Liabilities are simply obligations your business owes-loans, accounts payable, payroll taxes, and more. Tracking them monthly keeps your financials honest and your cash plan realistic.
What counts as a liability
- Short-term: AP, credit cards, sales tax payable, payroll tax payable, accrued expenses, deferred revenue
- Long-term: Loans and lines of credit, equipment financing, notes to owners
Why liabilities matter
- Cash forecasting: Know what’s due and when
- Compliance: Remit sales and payroll taxes on time
- Decision-making: Understand leverage and solvency before you take on more debt
Commonly missed liabilities
- Sales tax and payroll tax payable
- Owner loans that never get recorded
- Credit card balances that lag the statements
- Customer prepayments (deferred revenue)
How we help
We reconcile liability accounts monthly and add a simple schedule to your close package so you always know balances and due dates.
Want liability schedules you can trust? Start your free month.
FAQs
What is a liability in bookkeeping?
It’s an obligation your business owes-loans, AP, taxes, payroll liabilities, and deferred revenue.
Why track liabilities monthly?
To understand cash needs, stay compliant on taxes, and measure leverage and solvency.
What happens if liabilities aren’t recorded?
Financials understate debt and expenses, creating cash surprises and compliance risks.
Which liabilities are most often missed?
Sales tax payable, payroll tax payable, credit card balances, and unrecorded loans from owners.
How do liabilities affect forecasting?
Scheduled repayments and tax remittances are key cash outflows in budgets and cash flow plans.
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