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Liquid Receivables and Debtor Accounts

Receivable-adjacent asset terms used in liquidity analysis and debtor-account presentation.

Liquid Receivables and Debtor Accounts covers receivable-adjacent asset terms used in liquidity analysis and debtor-account presentation.

Use these pages when receivable quality changes revenue collectability, working capital, credit risk, cash conversion, or earnings quality. It sits inside Receivables Basics, so readers can move up when the broader accounting context matters.

Use the table below to choose the narrower accounting branch before applying a term to a statement line, model input, audit trail, tax schedule, covenant test, or management report.

What This Branch Covers

AreaUse it for
Interest Receivable AccountAsset account for interest income earned but not yet collected in cash.
Long-Term DebtorsReceivable balances expected to be collected beyond the normal current period or operating cycle.
Net Quick AssetsLiquidity measure comparing cash, marketable securities, and receivables with current liabilities.
Quick AssetHighly liquid asset, often including cash, marketable securities, and receivables, used in near-term liquidity analysis.

What to Check

  • Invoice, aging schedule, customer balance, allowance methodology, write-off record, collection history, and credit terms.
  • Whether the receivable is trade, nontrade, current, past due, doubtful, written off, pledged, or factored.
  • Effect on revenue quality, bad-debt expense, allowance, working capital, cash flow, DSO, and credit exposure.
  • Customer concentration, dispute status, payment behavior, collateral, and subsequent collection evidence.
  • Comparability across periods, credit policies, industries, and reserve methods.

Common Mistakes

  • Treating receivables as cash without checking collectability.
  • Ignoring aging, disputes, concentrations, and allowance changes.
  • Comparing DSO without matching revenue recognition and credit terms.
  • Assuming a write-off means the original sale was never recorded.

Receivables content is educational and does not provide accounting, audit, tax, credit, legal, collection, investment, or valuation advice.

In this section

Choose a subsection first. Deeper term pages live inside each subsection, which keeps large topic hubs readable.

Interest Receivable Account

Interest Receivable Account is a receivables accounting concept used to estimate credit losses, doubtful accounts, or recoverability.

Long-Term Debtors

Long-Term Debtors is a receivables accounting concept used to estimate credit losses, doubtful accounts, or recoverability.

Net Quick Assets

Liquidity measure comparing cash, marketable securities, and receivables with current liabilities.

Quick Asset

Quick Asset is a receivables accounting concept used to estimate credit losses, doubtful accounts, or recoverability.

Revised on Sunday, June 21, 2026