These include all operating loans, accounts payable and accrued charges including outstanding cheques, wages, long-term debt payments and taxes that are due within a year.
Debts due on demand, or within a year.
Liabilities which fall due for payment within one year. They include that part of long-term loans due for repayment within one year.
or current debt - arc usually (arbitrarily) defined as debts to be paid within one year of the date of the financial statement.
Obligations due within one year or within the normal operating cycle, whichever is longer.
Liabilities which are expected to be settled in less than a year are known as current liabilities.... more on: Current liabilities
Liabilities that must be paid within a one-year period, including the current (one year's worth) portion of long-term debt.
Liabilities that would, in the ordinary course of operations, be due and payable within 12 months after the end of the financial year under review.
Liabilities that are normally payable within a year.
Includes all debts and expenses due within one year (such as, accounts payable, accrued liabilities, current portions of long-term debt). See liabilities, current.
A company's debts that are payable within a year's time.
An obligation that will be paid in the ordinary course of business or within one year.
Short term working commitments of a company such as trade creditors, sums due to banks, taxation and dividends payable.
Claims which may have to be met within a short period of time, usually not longer than a year. See statement of assets and liabilities.
A company's short-term debt, due in less than a year. Current liabilities include accounts payable, income taxes, accrued expenses, and the portion of long-term debt due within one year. Current assets divided by current liabilities yields the current ratio, a measure of a company's ability to pay off short-term liabilities with available assets.
debts of a business that will be paid within a year
Liabilities that in the ordinary course of business would be consumed or turned into cash within 12 months.
Obligations a company has to creditors, suppliers, tax authorities, and others, payable within one year.
Those obligations intended to be paid in one year or less, usually from earnings.
Those obligations which are payable within one year from current assets or current resources.
Current liabilities are the liabilities, which have to be paid within a period of one year. It consists of creditors, bills payable and provisions for payment of dividends, interest and taxes.
All debts payable in the ensuing year, normally from current assets. They include Accounts Payable, Short-Term Notes, the current portion of Long-Term Notes, Interest Payable, Income Taxes (for incorporated or limited companies - proprietors and partners pay personal but not business income taxes) and salaries and wages currently owed.
Short-term sources of funding from outside the business due to be re-paid within one year.
Liabilities whose liquidation is reasonably expected to require the use of resources classified as current assets or the creation of other current liabilities within the next year. May include accounts payable, accrued salaries and wages, deferred revenues, and long term debt current portion, among others.
Debt payable within one year (e.g. accounts payable, sales and payroll taxes payable, line of credit balance, and a certain portion of term loans).
Any debts owed by the firm that must be paid within one year.
Debts payable within one year, including current portions of any long-term debt.
Measurable debt owed within one year, including accounts payable, accrued liabilities, taxes due and short-term notes due.
Debts owing which fall due within one year of the balance sheet date.
Obligations that will come due within a year from the current date. These usually include accounts payable, accrued expenses, and the portion of long-term obligations due within one year. See also non-current liabilities.
Amounts owed that will ordinarily be paid by a firm within one year. Such items include accounts payable, wages payable, taxes payable, the current portion of long-term debt, other short-term bank debt, and interest and dividends payable.
liabilities which may have to be paid off within 12 months, including normal credit accounts.
A debt which is normally due within a year.
Liabilities of a company that the company expects to satisfy within one year. Typically accounts payable, short term debt, taxes payable, interest payable and dividends payable.
Money owed by the company which it will have to pay within the year.
Debts owed or other obligations that the company expects to meet within the next year. Includes short term debt, outstanding accounts payable, the portion of long term debt that will be repaid within the period, income tax payable and dividends payable.
Usually short-term debt—obligations falling due within a year or less.
Money owed by a company to be paid within the next year.
Liabilities, which must be paid within one year.
Liabilities that have to be paid or satisfied within one year. Include accounts payable, notes payable, taxes, wage accruals and current portions of long-term debt.
debts that must be repaid in one year or less.
financial obligations that will have to be satisfied within the next 12 months. Current liabilities include accounts payable, taxes, wage accruals, and total short-term debt, or Debt Due (the sum of notes payable and the portion of long-term debt maturing in the operating year).
Debts and obligations of an organization that are due within one year.
Refer to obligations due and payable within a year.
Debts that you have to pay back within the next 12 months (e.g. from suppliers, or a bank overdraft).
Liabilities payable within one year. They include accounts payable, notes payable, accrued expenses such as wages and salaries, taxes payable, and the portion of long-term debts due within one year.
Total current liabilities represent creditor or other obligations that the company expects to satisfy within one year. It includes accounts payable, short term debt, notes payable, current portion of long term debt, income taxes payable, dividends payable, other current liabilities.
All sums payable by a company within one year. Includes account payables etc.
Debts the business must pay within one year.
are amounts owed that must be paid for in the short term, usually within a year. Accounts payable is an example of a common current liability. Current liabilities are considered accrued (built-up) expenses.
A company`s short-term debts to its suppliers and creditors.
debts and other amounts owed to creditors by the business entity due within one year. Includes wages payable, accounts payable, dividends payable, taxes payable, and so forth.
Obligations a company has to others, such as creditors, suppliers and tax authorities, payable within one year. Listed in the liabilities category on the statement of financial position. See also accounts payable, debt, income taxes.
Debt or other obligations that are due within twelve months. See: Liability
These include bank overdrafts, short term loans (less than a year), and what the business owes its suppliers. They are termed 'current' for the same reasons outlined under 'current assets' in the previous paragraph.
Money owed and due to be paid within a year, e.g. accounts payable.
Liabilities that are payable within one year.
Debts due in one year or less. They are paid by current assets.
Liabilities to be paid within one year of the balance sheet date.
Amount owed for salaries, interest, …due in a year.
Current liabilities are those short-term liabilities which are intended to be constantly replaced in the normal course of trading activity. Current liabilities typically comprise: trade creditors, accruals and bank overdrafts.
Obligations that must be paid within one year.
These are amounts owed to suppliers (creditors) together with short term loans such as bank overdrafts. Short term loans are those less than one year and so part of hire purchase liabilities may also be included under this heading where they are repayable within the next twelve months. (Contrast current assets.)
Outstanding debts of the business which will become due within the next twelve months.
An accounting term for those organizational obligations that are owed within the next year.
Current Liabilities is the money owed by a business that must be paid within one year such as Accounts Payable and Loan Principal and Loan Interest that is due within one year.
The debts of a company which are due and payable within the next 12 months.
Debts that must be paid within a relatively short period of time, usually within one year.
The value of those liabilities at the Balance sheet date that the company is required to settle (pay) either on demand, or within the next 12 months.
Money owed and payable by a company, usually within one year.
Amount owed for salaries, interest, accounts payable and other debts due within 1 year.
Debt or other obligations that are payable within a year.
Obligations that must be paid within 12 months. These include accounts payable, short-term debt and interest on long-term debt.
Liabilities payable within one year. Examples are accounts payable and payroll taxes payable.
Liabilities of a company that the company expects to satisfy within one year. Typically account payable, Short Term Debt, notes payable, taxes payable, Dividends payable and other current liabilities.
The amount owed for debts due within one year.
Those debts which are repayable at short notice but no longer than one year from the balance sheet and in the normal course of business. The items included are trade creditors, bank overdraft, current taxation, and dividends due and payable.
Liabilities that are due in the normal business cycle of a company, usually within one year.
all debts that fall due within one year. Page 328
Those liabilities that will be paid within the next accounting period, or will require the expenditure of a current asset. Among these are debt principal and interest due within one year, accounts payable, and customer deposits.
Active liability accounts that may include bank overdrafts, short-term loans (less than one year), and amounts owed by a business to its suppliers.
Debts or other obligations coming due within a year.
obligations whose liquidation is reasonably expected to require the use of current assets or the creation of other liabilities within the next twelve months.
All debts incurred in the normal day-to-day business and due within one calendar year.
Debt or other obligations that are payable within the next year.
Money owed to the company and due to be paid within a year, such as accounts payable. Current liabilities are found on the company's balance sheet.
Payables, bank loans and other debts payable within one year.
Liabilities (including short-term loans and trade creditors) that are likely to be settled within a year.
Expenses that are due to be paid.
Debts you expect to pay within one year.
The cost of debts that are payable within 12 months.
Amounts which fall due for payment within 12 months of the Balance Sheet date (e.g. creditors, bank overdrafts, current taxation, etc).
Obligations due within one year of the balance sheet date. (If a company's operating cycle is longer than one year, an item is a current liability if it is due within the operating cycle.) Another condition is that the item will use cash or it will create another current liability. (This means that if a bond payable is due within one year of the balance sheet date, but the bond will be retired by a bond sinking fund (a long term restricted asset) the bond will not be reported as a current liability.) To Top