Interest Payable
Accrued But Unpaid Interest on Borrowings
Interest Payable (or Accrued Interest Payable) is the amount of interest expense that has been incurred on debt obligations as of the balance sheet date but has not yet been paid to lenders. It represents the company's obligation to pay interest accrued during the reporting period, typically classified as a current liability since interest is usually due within one year.
What Is Interest Payable?
Interest Payable arises from the accrual principle: interest expense is recognized as time passes, even if payment is not due until later.
It accumulates between interest payment dates and is reset to zero when payment is made.
Matches interest expense timing with the period the borrowing benefits the company.
Common Sources
- Bank loans and lines of credit
- Corporate bonds (accrued semi-annually)
- Notes payable
- Mortgages and finance leases
- Convertible debt
- Seller financing or vendor notes
Zero-interest debt (rare) has no accrual unless below-market rate requires imputation.
Accounting Treatment
Journal entries:
- Monthly/periodic accrual: Debit Interest Expense, Credit Interest Payable
- Payment: Debit Interest Payable, Credit Cash
For bonds/notes issued at discount/premium: Effective interest method amortizes to interest expense.
Long-term debt with interest due >12 months may have non-current portion (rare).
Balance Sheet Presentation
Typically under current liabilities as:
- 'Interest Payable'
- 'Accrued Interest Payable'
- 'Accrued Interest'
- Often grouped in 'Payables and Accrued Expenses' or 'Other Current Liabilities'
Footnotes disclose by debt instrument if material.
Calculation Example
Company has $10M bond at 6% annual interest, paid semi-annually.
- Semi-annual payment: $300,000
- Monthly accrual: $50,000
- At month-end before payment: Interest Payable = $50,000–$300,000 (depending on timing)
Analytical Implications
Interest payable provides insight into:
- Timing of interest payments (seasonality)
- Effective interest cost (compare to expense)
- Liquidity needs (upcoming cash outflow)
- Debt burden relative to cash flow
- Accrual accuracy (should reset periodically)
Persistently high balances may indicate delayed payments or growing debt.
Key Takeaways
Interest Payable is accrued but unpaid interest on borrowings.
Recognized periodically to match expense with borrowing period.
Almost always current liability due to frequent payment cycles.
Resets to zero upon interest payment.
Reflects timing difference between interest expense and cash payment.
Monitor alongside debt balances for full interest burden view.
Interest Payable
Accrued But Unpaid Interest on Borrowings
Interest Payable (or Accrued Interest Payable) is the amount of interest expense that has been incurred on debt obligations as of the balance sheet date but has not yet been paid to lenders. It represents the company's obligation to pay interest accrued during the reporting period, typically classified as a current liability since interest is usually due within one year.
Table of Contents
What Is Interest Payable?
Interest Payable arises from the accrual principle: interest expense is recognized as time passes, even if payment is not due until later.
It accumulates between interest payment dates and is reset to zero when payment is made.
Matches interest expense timing with the period the borrowing benefits the company.
Common Sources
- Bank loans and lines of credit
- Corporate bonds (accrued semi-annually)
- Notes payable
- Mortgages and finance leases
- Convertible debt
- Seller financing or vendor notes
Zero-interest debt (rare) has no accrual unless below-market rate requires imputation.
Accounting Treatment
Journal entries:
- Monthly/periodic accrual: Debit Interest Expense, Credit Interest Payable
- Payment: Debit Interest Payable, Credit Cash
For bonds/notes issued at discount/premium: Effective interest method amortizes to interest expense.
Long-term debt with interest due >12 months may have non-current portion (rare).
Balance Sheet Presentation
Typically under current liabilities as:
- 'Interest Payable'
- 'Accrued Interest Payable'
- 'Accrued Interest'
- Often grouped in 'Payables and Accrued Expenses' or 'Other Current Liabilities'
Footnotes disclose by debt instrument if material.
Calculation Example
Company has $10M bond at 6% annual interest, paid semi-annually.
- Semi-annual payment: $300,000
- Monthly accrual: $50,000
- At month-end before payment: Interest Payable = $50,000–$300,000 (depending on timing)
Analytical Implications
Interest payable provides insight into:
- Timing of interest payments (seasonality)
- Effective interest cost (compare to expense)
- Liquidity needs (upcoming cash outflow)
- Debt burden relative to cash flow
- Accrual accuracy (should reset periodically)
Persistently high balances may indicate delayed payments or growing debt.
Key Takeaways
Interest Payable is accrued but unpaid interest on borrowings.
Recognized periodically to match expense with borrowing period.
Almost always current liability due to frequent payment cycles.
Resets to zero upon interest payment.
Reflects timing difference between interest expense and cash payment.
Monitor alongside debt balances for full interest burden view.
Related Terms
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