{"id":155844,"date":"2024-01-24T22:23:39","date_gmt":"2024-01-24T22:23:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.techopedia.com\/?post_type=how-to&p=155844"},"modified":"2024-01-24T22:23:39","modified_gmt":"2024-01-24T22:23:39","slug":"how-to-create-a-profit-and-loss-statement-in-cur_year","status":"publish","type":"how-to","link":"https:\/\/www.techopedia.com\/hr\/how-to-create-a-profit-and-loss-statement","title":{"rendered":"How to Create a Profit and Loss Statement in 2024"},"content":{"rendered":"
When you’re talking financials and the boss asks, ‘How are we doing?’ \u2014 you need an unambiguous answer. Nothing cuts to the fiscal truth faster than a profit and loss statement (P&L).<\/p>\n
Typically presented as a table, the P&L gives business owners a snapshot of recent performance. It shows revenues, costs, and overheads with a calculation of net profit. Pretty much at a glance, you’ll know if the business is earning a profit or bleeding red.<\/p>\n
Along with cash flow statements and balance sheets<\/a>, P&Ls complete the triptych of bedrock business documents every seller of goods or services needs to maintain. Together they paint a concise picture of current financial performance, but the P&L is special.<\/p>\n With blunt simplicity, it tells you how much money is coming in, how much is going out the door, and where it’s being spent. Pretty straightforward but more than enough to make smart decisions about the firm’s most profitable activities, biggest costs, and underperforming products.<\/p>\n P&Ls are usually generated monthly, quarterly, or yearly, so the period covered will affect the number of entries you need to capture in the underlying tables. The top-line figures, though, remain essentially the same.<\/p>\n Here’s a step-by-step guide to creating your own.<\/p>\n Adding up all the money you’re making is the natural starting point for a P&L. Income sources are usually tracked in a general ledger under current account categories like cash on hand and the invoices awaiting payment in accounts receivable.<\/p>\n The time frame is important. If you’re creating a P&L for monthly review, only include revenue received or due within the month. It’s the same if you’re generating a quarterly statement. Just add up the revenue received in that three-month period.<\/p>\n Revenue means everything that generates an income for the business \u2014 selling products, providing services, or auctioning off used equipment.<\/p>\n Sometimes called ‘cost of goods sold’ or COGS, cost of sales is part of the P&L where you calculate what you’ve spent on less predictable business needs like raw materials or inventory management. These are different from fixed expenses like leases or salaries.<\/p>\n In practice, it means that \u2026<\/p>\n This one is easy. With gross revenue and cost of sales calculated, you just subtract one from the other (revenue minus cost of sales) to arrive at the gross profit figure for the period.<\/p>\n Now you can add up your business expenses. This means any fixed costs you have to assume in order to operate. This can include rent, payroll, insurance, travel, marketing, order fulfillment, and utility bills.<\/p>\n With a total figure for your overhead, you can now calculate operating profit. This measure gives you a sense of whether or not the business is running profitably on a regular basis. To arrive at the figure for total operating profit or loss, use this formula: Gross Profit – Operating Expenses = Operating Profit\/Loss.<\/p>\n In addition to the revenue sources listed above, a business might also earn income from interest on assets or dividends from investments. If so, this is where it should be captured. The correct way to use other income is to add it to the operating profit<\/strong> figure. This combined figure gives you total earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (or EBITDA in accounting lingo). Use this formula: (Operating Profit) + (Interest Income + Dividends Earned) = EBITDA.<\/p>\n The final step is to understand what’s left over from gross profit<\/strong> after all overheads and expenses are tallied. To do this you need to make one final calculation of outgoings that captures interest payments, taxes, as well as depreciation and amortization expenses. You subtract this figure from the EBITDA figure above, and the result is your net profit<\/strong><\/a>. Use this formula: (EBIDTA) – (Interest + Taxes + Depreciation) = Net Profit\/Loss.<\/p>\n Of course, you might save yourself some steps by using an accounting software package to build your P&L. For larger businesses, that’s likely a good idea. Smaller businesses can probably get by just fine with an Excel spreadsheet.<\/p>\n While profit and loss statements follow a predictable structure, there are two different formats you can use: single-step<\/strong> or multiple-step<\/strong>. The one you choose depends on how your business is set up, and each has advantages and disadvantages.<\/p>\n A single-step P&L gives you a basic snapshot of revenue, expenses, and bottom-line net income. Your income is calculated at the top of the table, while expenses are calculated at the bottom. For smaller firms, this straightforward approach saves time and effort for the managers and accountants who create the P&L and for anyone who reads them.<\/p>\n For public companies, a single-step P&L allows investors to go straight to the net income figure and quickly assess the company’s overall health.<\/p>\n On the downside, a single-step P&L may be too superficial to accurately capture what’s happening with the business. Because it doesn’t include measures like gross and operating profit, an investor or manager would have to dig deeper to understand where the business is absorbing costs.<\/p>\nKey Takeaways<\/span><\/h2>\n
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How to Make a Profit and Loss Statement<\/span><\/h2>\n
Step 1: Capture gross revenue<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Step 2: Capture the cost of sales<\/strong><\/h3>\n
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Step 3: Calculate gross profit<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Step 4: Calculate overheads\/operating expenses<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Step 5: Calculate operating profit<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Step 6: Add other income to establish EBITDA<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Step 7: Calculate net profit (or loss)<\/strong><\/h3>\n
Time-saving tip<\/strong><\/h3>\n
What’s an Example of Profit and Loss?<\/span><\/h2>\n
Single-Step P&Ls<\/strong><\/h3>\n