Accounts Payable vs Accounts Receivable — The Complete Comparison | Learn Edition

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Accounts Payable vs Accounts Receivable

Two ledger columns, one business. Accounts Payable is what a company owes; Accounts Receivable is what it's owed. Confuse the two and you can misread a balance sheet, misjudge a company's cash health, or run a business straight into a cash crunch. This is the complete, plain-language comparison — built for students, investors, accountants, and business owners anywhere in the world.

Payable

Accounts Payable (AP)

Money flow: Out of the business

  • Bills the company owes to suppliers and vendors
  • Recorded as a liability on the balance sheet
  • Sits under Current Liabilities
  • Managed by the AP or "procure-to-pay" team
Receivable

Accounts Receivable (AR)

Money flow: Into the business

  • Money customers owe the company for goods or services delivered
  • Recorded as an asset on the balance sheet
  • Sits under Current Assets
  • Managed by the AR or "order-to-cash" team

01 — In One Sentence

The definitions, stripped down

Accounts Payable

Accounts Payable is the total amount a business currently owes to its suppliers, vendors, and other creditors for goods or services it has already received but has not yet paid for. It's a short-term (current) liability — a promise to pay, usually due within 30, 60, or 90 days.

Accounts Receivable

Accounts Receivable is the total amount customers currently owe a business for goods or services it has already delivered but has not yet been paid for. It's a short-term (current) asset — a right to collect cash, usually within 30, 60, or 90 days.

Here's the fastest way to keep them straight: Payable = you owe. Receivable = you're owed. Every credit transaction between two businesses creates both — your Accounts Payable is always someone else's Accounts Receivable, and vice versa. A textile supplier's AR entry for a t-shirt brand is the exact same invoice sitting in that brand's AP ledger. They are mirror images of one transaction, recorded from two different sides of the desk.

02 — The Big Picture

Where AP and AR sit in the cash cycle

Every company sits between two groups: the suppliers it buys from, and the customers it sells to. Cash flows in from customers (creating and then clearing Accounts Receivable) and flows out to suppliers (creating and then clearing Accounts Payable). The diagram below shows the full loop.

SUPPLIERS vendors & providers YOUR COMPANY CUSTOMERS buyers of your product goods / services cash out (settles AP) goods / services cash in (clears AR) THIS GAP = ACCOUNTS PAYABLE received goods, haven't paid yet THIS GAP = ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE delivered goods, haven't been paid yet

Fig. 1 — The company sits between suppliers and customers. The time lag between receiving goods and paying for them is Accounts Payable; the time lag between delivering goods and collecting cash is Accounts Receivable.

This is why finance teams talk about the cash conversion cycle: the number of days between paying cash out to suppliers and collecting cash in from customers. A business that pays suppliers slowly (high AP days) and collects from customers quickly (low AR days) holds onto cash longer and generally runs on a healthier cushion. A business with the opposite pattern — paying suppliers fast and collecting from customers slowly — can look profitable on paper while quietly running out of cash.

03 — Deep Dive

What is Accounts Payable, in practice?

Accounts Payable (AP) is the record of every unpaid bill a business has from its suppliers — office rent, raw materials, software subscriptions, contractor invoices, utility bills, anything bought on credit rather than paid for immediately. The moment a business receives an invoice it hasn't paid yet, that invoice becomes a line item in AP. When the bill is paid, it disappears from AP and cash goes down instead.

AP is not a single number sitting still — it's a rolling balance. New bills come in constantly and old bills get paid off constantly, which is why companies track it as a subsidiary ledger: one line per vendor, per invoice, per due date, all rolling up into the single "Accounts Payable" figure on the balance sheet.

Real-Time Example

A bakery in Lisbon orders 200kg of flour from a regional mill on 30-day credit terms. The mill delivers the flour on the 1st of the month along with an invoice for €340. The bakery now owes €340 — this sits in its Accounts Payable until it pays the mill, typically on or before the 30-day due date. If the bakery orders flour every week from three different suppliers, its AP balance at any given moment is the sum of every unpaid invoice from all of them.

Here's how that transaction is recorded in the bakery's books at two moments in time:

// When the flour is received (invoice recorded)
Dr. Inventory (Flour)€340
Cr. Accounts Payable€340
// When the bakery pays the mill 30 days later
Dr. Accounts Payable€340
Cr. Cash€340

Notice the pattern: receiving the bill increases a liability; paying it reduces cash and reduces that same liability. AP never touches revenue or expense at the payment stage — the expense (or asset, in this case inventory) was already recognized when the goods arrived, which is a core idea in accrual accounting.

04 — Deep Dive

What is Accounts Receivable, in practice?

Accounts Receivable (AR) is the mirror image: the record of every invoice a business has sent to its customers that hasn't been paid yet. The moment a business delivers a product or finishes a service and issues an invoice instead of collecting cash on the spot, that invoice becomes a line item in AR. When the customer pays, it disappears from AR and cash goes up instead.

Like AP, AR is tracked in a subsidiary ledger — one line per customer, per invoice, per due date — all rolling up into the single "Accounts Receivable" figure on the balance sheet. Businesses that sell on credit (which is most business-to-business, or "B2B," commerce) live and die by how well they manage this ledger.

Real-Time Example

A freelance UI/UX designer in Bangalore completes a website redesign for a client in Toronto and sends an invoice for $2,400 with 15-day payment terms. Until that client pays, the $2,400 sits in the designer's Accounts Receivable — the designer has already done the work and is legally owed the money, but hasn't collected the cash yet. If the client pays late, the designer still "made" $2,400 in revenue on the income statement, but has zero extra cash in the bank to show for it until the invoice actually clears.

Here's how that transaction is recorded in the designer's books:

// When the invoice is issued (work completed)
Dr. Accounts Receivable$2,400
Cr. Service Revenue$2,400
// When the client pays 15 days later
Dr. Cash$2,400
Cr. Accounts Receivable$2,400

This gap between "earning" revenue and actually collecting it is exactly why two companies with identical income statements can have completely different cash positions. Revenue is an opinion; cash is a fact — and AR is the bridge, or sometimes the trap, between the two.

05 — Side by Side

Complete comparison table

AP vs AR across every dimension that matters
DimensionAccounts PayableAccounts Receivable
DefinitionMoney the business owes to suppliersMoney owed to the business by customers
Balance sheetCurrent liabilityCurrent asset
Cash directionFuture cash outflowFuture cash inflow
Created byPurchasing goods/services on creditSelling goods/services on credit
Cleared byPaying the supplierCollecting from the customer
Normal balanceCreditDebit
Owned/managed byAP department / bookkeeper / bill-pay teamAR department / billing / collections team
Related documentVendor invoice, purchase orderSales invoice, delivery note
Key metricDays Payable Outstanding (DPO)Days Sales Outstanding (DSO)
Risk if mismanagedLate fees, damaged supplier trust, halted supplyBad debt, cash shortfall, write-offs
Goal for cash flowStretch (within agreed terms) — pay later without penaltyCompress — collect sooner
Analogous personal-finance termYour credit card billMoney a friend owes you
Turnover ratioAP Turnover RatioAR Turnover Ratio
Appears withAccrued liabilities, notes payableAllowance for doubtful accounts, unbilled revenue

05.1 — Beyond The Table

Six differences worth understanding properly

A table is a good reference, but a few of these differences deserve a proper explanation, because they're the ones that trip people up in interviews, exams, and real financial statements.

1. They sit on opposite sides of the balance sheet

The balance sheet balances because every asset is either paid for with a company's own money (equity) or someone else's money (liabilities). Accounts Receivable belongs on the asset side because it represents a future economic benefit — cash the company has a right to collect. Accounts Payable belongs on the liability side because it represents a future economic sacrifice — cash the company is obligated to pay out. Mixing these up, even briefly, throws off every ratio built on top of the balance sheet, from the current ratio to working capital.

2. They move in opposite directions when business grows fast

Rapid growth tends to inflate both AP and AR at the same time, but not always at the same speed. A fast-growing retailer buying more inventory sees AP climb as it owes more to suppliers, while AR may barely move if most sales are in cash. A fast-growing B2B software company selling on invoiced contracts sees AR climb steeply, while AP might stay flat if the business itself has few physical suppliers. Reading which one is growing faster tells you a lot about the underlying business model.

3. One is optional to negotiate hard; the other requires tact

A business has real leverage to negotiate payment terms with its own suppliers — asking for 60 days instead of 30 is a normal, expected conversation. Asking a customer to accept slower payment, on the other hand, works against the business's own interest. This is why companies push AP terms outward and AR terms inward whenever they can, and why the negotiation skillset for each role is almost the opposite of the other.

4. The risk they carry is different in kind, not just size

Accounts Payable risk is largely about relationships and reputation: pay too late too often, and suppliers tighten terms, demand upfront payment, or stop supplying altogether. Accounts Receivable risk is largely financial: extend credit to the wrong customer, and the money may simply never arrive, turning into a direct loss through bad debt. Both are manageable, but they require different tools — AP relies on process discipline and vendor communication, AR relies on credit checks and collections discipline.

5. They are not the same as Notes Payable or Unearned Revenue

It's easy to lump every "money owed" figure together, but accountants separate them carefully. Notes Payable is a formal, often interest-bearing loan obligation (like a bank loan), while Accounts Payable is a short-term, typically interest-free trade obligation to a supplier. On the other side, Unearned Revenue (or "deferred revenue") is cash a company has already collected for work it hasn't done yet — the opposite timing problem from Accounts Receivable, where work is done but cash hasn't arrived. All four appear on the balance sheet, but each tells a different story about timing.

6. Working capital is really the space between them

Working capital — current assets minus current liabilities — is heavily shaped by the gap between Accounts Receivable and Accounts Payable, alongside inventory. A company that collects from customers quickly and pays suppliers slowly needs far less outside financing to keep operating, because its own trade cycle effectively funds itself. A company with the reverse pattern needs more cash reserves, credit lines, or investor capital simply to bridge the timing gap, even if its underlying business is sound.

06 — Workflow

How each process actually runs

Definitions explain what AP and AR are. But in a real company, each one is a repeatable operational process with its own steps, checks, and handoffs. Here's what each looks like on the ground.

The Accounts Payable (Procure-to-Pay) process

1. Purchaseorder raised 2. Goods +invoicereceived 3. 3-way match(PO / receipt /invoice) 4. Approvalfor payment 5. Supplierpaid; APcleared

Fig. 2 — The AP team's job is to verify every bill is legitimate before money leaves the company.

The Accounts Receivable (Order-to-Cash) process

1. Orderdelivered /service done 2. Invoiceissued 3. Reminders /follow-up beforedue date 4. Customerpays 5. Cash applied;AR cleared

Fig. 3 — The AR team's job is to collect what's owed as fast as possible without damaging the customer relationship.

07 — Real Stories

What happens when it goes right, and wrong

"

The manufacturer that was profitable and still nearly ran out of cash

Case study · mid-size furniture manufacturer, Ohio, USA

A furniture manufacturer landed a huge contract with a national retail chain. On paper, the year looked great — revenue up 40%, healthy profit margin, a proud line item on the income statement. But the retail chain's standard payment terms were 90 days, while the manufacturer's timber and hardware suppliers demanded payment in 30. Every big order created a 60-day gap where the company had already paid for materials and labor but hadn't collected a cent from the sale.

As orders grew, so did the gap. Accounts Receivable ballooned faster than cash could come in, and the company had to draw down a line of credit just to keep paying its own suppliers — its Accounts Payable — on time. The business was, by every measure on the income statement, doing brilliantly. It was also two missed loan payments away from insolvency. The fix wasn't more sales; it was renegotiating payment terms with the retailer and factoring some invoices to convert AR into cash faster.

"

The SaaS startup that fixed its cash position without changing revenue

Case study · early-stage software company, Singapore

A small software startup billed customers monthly but let invoices sit unpaid for 45–60 days on average, mostly because nobody owned the follow-up. Meanwhile, the founders paid every vendor bill the moment it landed, out of habit and a desire to be a "good" client. The result: cash was almost always tight, even though the company was growing and technically profitable.

The fix took under a month. The team introduced automated payment reminders three days before and on the due date, added a small late fee to contracts, and shifted supplier payments to the last day allowed under each vendor's terms instead of paying early. Average collection time dropped from 52 days to 21. Average payment time to suppliers stretched from 8 days to a full 30, still within terms. No new customers, no new revenue — just tighter management of the same AP and AR that had always existed — and the company's cash cushion roughly tripled within two quarters.

08 — The Numbers

Metrics investors and accountants actually watch

Anyone reading financial statements — an investor sizing up a company, an accountant closing the books, a business owner planning next quarter — leans on a handful of ratios built directly from AP and AR. These numbers say more about a company's short-term health than revenue or profit alone.

Days Payable Outstanding (DPO)

The average number of days a company takes to pay its suppliers. A higher DPO means the company is holding onto cash longer — good for cash flow, but too high can strain supplier relationships.

DPO = (Accounts Payable ÷ Cost of Goods Sold) × Number of Days

Example: AP of $50,000, COGS of $600,000 over 90 days → DPO = (50,000 ÷ 600,000) × 90 ≈ 7.5 days.

Days Sales Outstanding (DSO)

The average number of days a company takes to collect payment after a sale. A lower DSO means faster cash collection — generally a sign of efficient billing and a creditworthy customer base.

DSO = (Accounts Receivable ÷ Total Credit Sales) × Number of Days

Example: AR of $80,000, credit sales of $960,000 over 90 days → DSO = (80,000 ÷ 960,000) × 90 = 7.5 days.

Accounts Payable Turnover Ratio

How many times per year a company pays off its average AP balance. A higher ratio suggests the company pays suppliers quickly; a lower ratio suggests it stretches payments — sometimes by choice, sometimes from cash pressure.

AP Turnover = Total Supplier Purchases ÷ Average Accounts Payable

Accounts Receivable Turnover Ratio

How many times per year a company collects its average AR balance. A higher ratio means faster, more efficient collections and lower risk of bad debt.

AR Turnover = Net Credit Sales ÷ Average Accounts Receivable

Why investors care

The gap between DSO and DPO is a rough proxy for how much working capital a business needs to fund its own growth. A retailer with a 10-day DSO and 45-day DPO is effectively being financed by its suppliers. A contractor with a 60-day DSO and 15-day DPO is financing its customers out of its own pocket — and needs more cash reserves, credit, or investor capital to keep growing at the same pace.

09 — Why It Matters To You

AP and AR, from four different chairs

Students

AP and AR are usually the first real-world liability and asset you learn to journal. Master the debit/credit pattern here and double-entry bookkeeping stops feeling abstract — every purchase and sale you make in daily life has an AP/AR equivalent happening somewhere in a business. Most introductory accounting exams lean heavily on these two accounts precisely because they force you to think about timing, not just totals.

Investors

A sudden jump in AR relative to sales can signal customers are struggling to pay, or that a company is loosening credit terms to inflate revenue. A stretching AP can mean smart cash management — or a company quietly running out of money. Read both against revenue growth, not in isolation, and always check the trend across several quarters rather than a single snapshot.

Accountants

Accuracy here directly affects the balance sheet, the cash flow statement, and every ratio built on top of them. Reconciling AP and AR subsidiary ledgers against the general ledger every period is one of the highest-value, lowest-glamour jobs in the profession, and it's usually where small errors — duplicate invoices, missed credits — get caught before they compound.

Business Owners

You can be profitable and still run out of cash if AR collects too slowly or AP comes due too fast. Managing the timing gap between the two — not just the totals — is often the single biggest lever you have over short-term survival, and it costs nothing but attention and process discipline to improve.

10 — Best Practices

Common mistakes, and how to avoid them

Accounts Payable

  1. Paying too early out of habit. Paying before the due date gives away free use of your own cash. Pay on the last allowed day, not the first.
  2. Skipping the three-way match. Paying an invoice without checking it against the purchase order and delivery receipt invites duplicate payments and fraud.
  3. Missing early-payment discounts. Many suppliers offer a small discount (e.g. "2/10 net 30") for paying within 10 days. Ignoring it quietly costs money every cycle.
  4. No approval workflow. Bills paid without sign-off are a common source of leakage in small businesses.

Accounts Receivable

  1. Vague or delayed invoicing. An invoice sent a week late is collected a week late, minimum. Bill the moment work is done.
  2. No follow-up system. Relying on memory to chase late payers guarantees some invoices are simply forgotten.
  3. Extending credit without checking it. Selling on credit to a customer with a poor payment history is how bad debt happens.
  4. Not aging the ledger. Failing to review an "AR aging report" (0–30, 31–60, 61–90+ days overdue) means slow-motion cash problems go unnoticed until they're a crisis.

11 — Test Yourself

Quick quiz: 10 questions

Ledger Trivia

How well do you know AP vs AR?

Answer all ten, then check your score. Every question also appears in the written answer key further down the page.

Answer key

    12.1 — Glossary

    Ten related terms worth knowing

    A handful of terms show up constantly alongside AP and AR, in textbooks, job listings, and annual reports alike. Here's what each one means in plain language.

    Trade Credit

    An arrangement where a supplier lets a buyer receive goods now and pay later, usually within a set number of days. This is the source of virtually all Accounts Payable and Accounts Receivable balances.

    Net 30 / Net 60 / Net 90

    Shorthand for payment terms: "Net 30" means full payment is due 30 days after the invoice date. The higher the number, the more time the buyer has before paying.

    Aging Report

    A report that sorts unpaid AP or AR invoices into buckets — such as 0–30, 31–60, 61–90, and 90+ days — so a business can see at a glance which bills are overdue and by how much.

    Working Capital

    Current assets minus current liabilities. It measures whether a business has enough short-term resources, including cash it expects to collect through AR, to cover what it owes in the near term, including AP.

    Cash Conversion Cycle

    The number of days between paying cash out for inventory or materials and collecting cash in from the resulting sale. It combines inventory days, AR days, and AP days into a single measure of how long cash is "tied up."

    Bad Debt

    Accounts Receivable that a company has concluded it will never collect, usually because a customer defaulted or went out of business. It's written off and recorded as an expense.

    Early Payment Discount

    A small price reduction a supplier offers if a bill is paid well before its due date — for example, "2/10 net 30" means a 2% discount if paid within 10 days, otherwise the full amount is due in 30.

    Three-Way Match

    An AP control that compares the purchase order, the goods-received note, and the supplier's invoice before approving payment, to confirm the business actually ordered and received what it's being billed for.

    Accrual Accounting

    The accounting method that records revenue and expenses when they're earned or incurred, not when cash actually changes hands. This is the reason AP and AR exist at all — under pure cash accounting, neither would appear on the books.

    Credit Terms

    The agreed conditions under which a sale or purchase on credit happens — how long the buyer has to pay, any discounts for paying early, and any penalties for paying late.

    12 — FAQ

    Frequently asked questions

    Is Accounts Payable a debit or a credit?+

    Accounts Payable normally carries a credit balance, because it's a liability. When a bill is received, AP is credited (increased); when it's paid, AP is debited (decreased) and Cash is credited.

    Is Accounts Receivable a debit or a credit?+

    Accounts Receivable normally carries a debit balance, because it's an asset. When an invoice is issued, AR is debited (increased); when the customer pays, AR is credited (decreased) and Cash is debited.

    Can a company have both high AP and high AR at the same time?+

    Yes, and most established B2B companies do. High AP and high AR simply mean the company both buys and sells heavily on credit. What matters is the relationship between the two — and how quickly each converts to cash — not the raw size of either number.

    What's the difference between Accounts Receivable and Accounts Receivable Turnover?+

    Accounts Receivable is a balance — the total dollar amount currently owed to the company at a point in time. AR Turnover is a ratio that measures how many times per year that balance is collected and replaced, showing collection speed rather than size.

    What happens if a customer never pays an invoice?+

    If collection efforts fail, the unpaid amount is eventually written off as bad debt expense, removed from Accounts Receivable, and the loss is recognized on the income statement. Many companies keep a running "allowance for doubtful accounts" to anticipate this in advance.

    Does Accounts Payable affect a company's credit score or rating?+

    Yes. Consistently paying suppliers late can damage a company's credit standing and make it harder to negotiate favorable terms in the future. Consistently paying on time (without paying unnecessarily early) tends to build stronger, more flexible supplier relationships.

    Are Accounts Payable and Accounts Receivable the same in every country?+

    The underlying concept is universal under both major accounting frameworks, IFRS and US GAAP — a liability for what's owed, an asset for what's owed to you. Terminology, tax treatment (such as how VAT or GST is layered onto invoices), and typical payment-term norms vary by country, but the core mechanics described on this page apply worldwide.

    What software do businesses use to manage AP and AR?+

    Small businesses commonly use accounting platforms with built-in AP/AR modules. Larger companies often run dedicated modules inside an ERP system, sometimes layered with automation tools for invoice capture, approval routing, and collections reminders. The tool matters far less than having a consistent process behind it.

    How do AP and AR appear on the cash flow statement?+

    In the indirect method, an increase in Accounts Payable is added back to operating cash flow (it means cash wasn't paid out yet), while an increase in Accounts Receivable is subtracted (it means cash wasn't collected yet), even though both may already be counted in net income.

    What is invoice factoring, and how does it relate to Accounts Receivable?+

    Invoice factoring is when a business sells its unpaid Accounts Receivable to a third party (a "factor") at a discount, in exchange for cash immediately instead of waiting for customers to pay. It converts AR into cash faster, at the cost of the discount the factor charges.

    Which is more important to manage well: Accounts Payable or Accounts Receivable?+

    Neither wins outright — they're two halves of the same cash timing problem, and mismanaging either one can sink a business. That said, many finance teams treat Accounts Receivable as the higher-priority fire to fight day to day, since uncollected revenue can quietly turn into a permanent loss, while Accounts Payable mistakes are usually recoverable through renegotiation or a later payment.

    How can a small business or student practice reading AP and AR in real financial statements?+

    Pull up any public company's annual report and look at the balance sheet's current asset and current liability sections — Accounts Receivable and Accounts Payable are almost always listed by name. Compare the figure to the prior year, then compare its growth rate to revenue growth in the same period. A receivable or payable balance growing much faster than revenue is usually worth a closer look.

    13 — Closing the Ledger

    The short version, one more time

    Accounts Payable is what a business owes to the people it buys from; Accounts Receivable is what's owed to the business by the people it sells to. One sits on the liability side of the balance sheet, the other on the asset side. One is settled by paying cash out, the other by collecting cash in. Neither is inherently good or bad to have — what matters is how quickly each one turns into an actual cash movement, and whether the gap between the two leaves a business with enough breathing room to operate.

    For a student, that gap is the clearest real-world entry point into double-entry bookkeeping. For an investor, it's an early warning system hidden in plain sight on every balance sheet. For an accountant, it's a discipline of accuracy that keeps every other number honest. And for a business owner, it's one of the few areas where better process — not more sales, not more funding — can directly buy more breathing room, starting this week.

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    Accounting Fundamentals Series · Accounts Payable vs Accounts Receivable

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