What Are Business Liabilities?
A liability is money your business owes to someone else. Liabilities appear on your Balance Sheet and represent your financial obligations, understanding them is key to managing cash flow.
A liability is money your business owes to someone else, a bank, a supplier, the CRA, an employee, or a shareholder. Liabilities appear on the right side of your Balance Sheet and represent your financial obligations.
Understanding your liabilities helps you manage cash flow, plan for upcoming payments, and understand how much of your business you actually own (equity = assets minus liabilities).
Types of Liabilities
Current Liabilities
Obligations due within the next 12 months. These are the ones most relevant to day-to-day cash flow management.
|
Liability |
What it is |
|
Accounts Payable |
Unpaid supplier bills |
|
GST/HST Payable |
Sales tax collected, not yet remitted to the CRA |
|
Payroll Liabilities |
Source deductions withheld, not yet remitted |
|
Credit Card Balance |
Outstanding balance on business credit card |
|
Current Portion of Long-Term Debt |
The principal payments due on a loan within the next 12 months |
|
Deferred Revenue |
Payment received for work not yet delivered |
|
Shareholder Loan |
If the corporation owes a shareholder money |
Long-Term Liabilities
Obligations due beyond 12 months.
|
Liability |
What it is |
|
Business Loan |
Bank loan principal (beyond the current year's payments) |
|
Line of Credit |
Outstanding balance on a business line of credit |
|
Equipment Financing |
Long-term financing for a purchased asset |
|
Mortgage |
Loan on an owned commercial property |
Liabilities and Your Financial Health
Liabilities aren't inherently bad, taking on debt to invest in assets that generate returns is a normal and often smart business decision. What matters is the relationship between your liabilities and your assets.
Key ratios your Mesa CPA advisor may track:
- Debt-to-equity ratio: Total liabilities divided by total equity. A high ratio means creditors own more of the business than you do.
- Current ratio: Current assets divided by current liabilities. Below 1.0 means you may not have enough short-term assets to cover short-term obligations.
These aren't numbers you need to track daily, but they're worth understanding when reviewing your Balance Sheet.
Abnormal Procedures
You have a liability on your Balance Sheet that you don't recognize.
Don't ignore it. Unknown liabilities are sometimes data entry errors, but occasionally they represent real obligations that were never properly resolved. Ask your Mesa CPA bookkeeper to investigate.
A liability account has a negative balance.
A negative liability balance usually means a payment was entered incorrectly, either an overpayment or a transaction entered in the wrong account. Bring it to your Mesa CPA bookkeeper to diagnose.
FAQ
Is accounts payable a liability?
Yes. Any money you owe to suppliers for work done or goods received but not yet paid for is a current liability.
What's the difference between a liability and an expense?
An expense reduces your income in the current period. A liability is an obligation that sits on your Balance Sheet until it's paid. When you enter a supplier bill in QBO, it becomes both an expense (on the P&L) and a liability (on the Balance Sheet). When you pay the bill, the liability clears, but the expense stays recorded.
Should I try to have zero liabilities?
Not necessarily. A business with no debt may be leaving growth opportunities on the table. The goal is manageable debt with assets that justify it. Your Mesa CPA advisor can help you evaluate your liability picture in context.
What happens to liabilities when I close or sell the business?
All liabilities must be settled before you can distribute remaining assets to owners. In a sale, liabilities are either assumed by the buyer, paid off from sale proceeds, or negotiated as part of the deal.