Why Profit Doesn’t Equal Cash
One of the most common conversations I have with business owners goes something like this:
“We’ve made a profit this year, so why isn’t there any money in the bank?”
It’s a fair question.
The answer is that profit and cash are two very different things.
Understanding the difference can help you avoid cash flow problems and make better business decisions.
Profit Is An Accounting Measure
Profit is calculated by taking your income and deducting your expenses.
Simple enough.
But profit doesn’t tell you whether you’ve actually received the cash.
You can invoice a customer today and record the income immediately, even if they don’t pay you for another 60 days.
Your accounts show a profit.
Your bank account doesn’t.
Where Does The Cash Go?
There are several common reasons why cash doesn’t match profit.
Customers Haven’t Paid Yet
This is often the biggest reason.
You may have completed the work and issued the invoice, but until the customer pays, the money isn’t available to spend.
That’s why reviewing your aged debtors regularly is so important.
You’ve Bought Stock
If you’re holding stock, the cash has already left the business.
However, that cost may not yet appear in your profit figures until the stock is sold.
You can have shelves full of inventory and a very empty bank account.
Loan Repayments
Loan repayments reduce cash but don’t necessarily reduce profit.
The capital element of a loan repayment isn’t an expense in your accounts.
So cash leaves the business, but profit remains unchanged.
VAT and Tax
The money sitting in your bank account isn’t always yours.
Some of it belongs to HMRC.
Businesses often get caught out by upcoming VAT bills or corporation tax liabilities that haven’t been set aside.
The Danger Of Looking Only At Profit
Profit tells you whether your business model works.
Cash tells you whether your business can survive.
You need both.
A profitable business with poor cash flow can quickly run into trouble.
A business with strong cash reserves has far more flexibility when opportunities or challenges arise.
Final Thought
When I’m sailing, speed alone doesn’t tell you whether you’re going in the right direction.
You also need to know where you are and what’s ahead.
Business finances are much the same.
Profit is important, but it’s only part of the picture.
Understanding your cash position is what keeps the business moving forward with confidence.

