Restricted Cash
Cash Not Freely Available for General Use
Restricted Cash refers to cash and cash equivalents that are not available for immediate or general business use due to legal, contractual, or other restrictions. These funds are set aside for specific purposes—such as debt service, collateral, escrow, or regulatory requirements—and are reported separately from unrestricted cash to provide a clear picture of true liquidity.
What Restricted Cash Includes
Restricted Cash covers cash balances subject to external constraints:
- Debt service reserve accounts (for bond/loan repayments)
- Escrow funds (M&A, legal settlements, real estate)
- Compensating balances (minimum deposits for credit lines)
- Collateral for letters of credit or derivatives
- Customer deposits held (utilities, rentals)
- Regulatory reserves (banks, insurance)
- Construction or project-specific funds
The key: management cannot use it freely for operations.
Distinguished from unrestricted cash by purpose and access limits.
Common Examples
- Homebuilder holds buyer deposits in escrow until closing
- Bank maintains compensating balance for a revolving credit facility
- Company sets aside funds for upcoming debt principal payment
- Insurance firm segregates policyholder premiums
- Mining company restricts funds for environmental reclamation
Accounting Treatment
- Classified current if restriction lifts within 12 months
- Non-current if longer-term (e.g., sinking fund for 10-year bond)
- Reported separately from unrestricted cash
- Cash flow statement: Often investing or financing activity
- Reconciliation of total cash (including restricted) in notes
ASU 2016-18 requires reconciliation of total cash including restricted amounts.
Balance Sheet Presentation
Shown as:
- 'Restricted Cash'
- 'Restricted Cash and Cash Equivalents'
- Current or non-current based on restriction timing
- Sometimes in 'Other Assets' with clear labeling
Footnotes explain nature, amount, and expected release.
Why Companies Have Restricted Cash
- Comply with debt covenants
- Secure financing or letters of credit
- Protect third-party funds (escrow, deposits)
- Meet regulatory capital/reserve rules
- Segregate project-specific funding
Analytical Implications
- True liquidity lower than headline cash
- Debt or contractual commitments
- Regulatory environment (banks, insurers)
- Upcoming large outflows (debt repayment, project spend)
- Cash flow classification (investing vs. operating)
High restricted cash reduces operational flexibility—focus on unrestricted balance.
Key Takeaways
Restricted Cash is cash unavailable for general use due to external limits.
Separate from unrestricted cash to show true liquidity.
Current/non-current by when restriction ends.
Common for debt reserves, escrow, compensating balances.
Indicates commitments or regulatory requirements.
Always check notes for amount and release timing.
Restricted Cash
Cash Not Freely Available for General Use
Restricted Cash refers to cash and cash equivalents that are not available for immediate or general business use due to legal, contractual, or other restrictions. These funds are set aside for specific purposes—such as debt service, collateral, escrow, or regulatory requirements—and are reported separately from unrestricted cash to provide a clear picture of true liquidity.
Table of Contents
What Restricted Cash Includes
Restricted Cash covers cash balances subject to external constraints:
- Debt service reserve accounts (for bond/loan repayments)
- Escrow funds (M&A, legal settlements, real estate)
- Compensating balances (minimum deposits for credit lines)
- Collateral for letters of credit or derivatives
- Customer deposits held (utilities, rentals)
- Regulatory reserves (banks, insurance)
- Construction or project-specific funds
The key: management cannot use it freely for operations.
Distinguished from unrestricted cash by purpose and access limits.
Common Examples
- Homebuilder holds buyer deposits in escrow until closing
- Bank maintains compensating balance for a revolving credit facility
- Company sets aside funds for upcoming debt principal payment
- Insurance firm segregates policyholder premiums
- Mining company restricts funds for environmental reclamation
Accounting Treatment
- Classified current if restriction lifts within 12 months
- Non-current if longer-term (e.g., sinking fund for 10-year bond)
- Reported separately from unrestricted cash
- Cash flow statement: Often investing or financing activity
- Reconciliation of total cash (including restricted) in notes
ASU 2016-18 requires reconciliation of total cash including restricted amounts.
Balance Sheet Presentation
Shown as:
- 'Restricted Cash'
- 'Restricted Cash and Cash Equivalents'
- Current or non-current based on restriction timing
- Sometimes in 'Other Assets' with clear labeling
Footnotes explain nature, amount, and expected release.
Why Companies Have Restricted Cash
- Comply with debt covenants
- Secure financing or letters of credit
- Protect third-party funds (escrow, deposits)
- Meet regulatory capital/reserve rules
- Segregate project-specific funding
Analytical Implications
- True liquidity lower than headline cash
- Debt or contractual commitments
- Regulatory environment (banks, insurers)
- Upcoming large outflows (debt repayment, project spend)
- Cash flow classification (investing vs. operating)
High restricted cash reduces operational flexibility—focus on unrestricted balance.
Key Takeaways
Restricted Cash is cash unavailable for general use due to external limits.
Separate from unrestricted cash to show true liquidity.
Current/non-current by when restriction ends.
Common for debt reserves, escrow, compensating balances.
Indicates commitments or regulatory requirements.
Always check notes for amount and release timing.
Related Terms
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