What Are Drawings?
A guide to drawings in UK accounting, covering the definition, accounting treatment, tax implications, and how drawings differ from salaries and dividends.
Drawings are amounts of cash, goods, or other assets withdrawn from a business by its owner for personal use. The concept applies to unincorporated businesses – specifically sole traders and partnerships – where there is no legal separation between the owner and the business.
Drawings are not a business expense. They do not appear in the income statement and are not tax-deductible. Instead, they are treated as a reduction in the owner’s equity (capital) in the business.
How Drawings Work
In a sole trader or partnership, the owner’s capital account represents the net investment in the business. Drawings reduce this capital account:
| Transaction | Effect on Capital |
|---|---|
| Owner introduces £20,000 cash into the business | Capital increases by £20,000 |
| Business earns £35,000 profit for the year | Capital increases by £35,000 |
| Owner withdraws £28,000 during the year | Capital decreases by £28,000 |
| Closing capital | £27,000 |
The owner’s closing capital is: Opening capital + Profit - Drawings.
Types of Drawings
Drawings are not limited to cash withdrawals. Any asset taken from the business for personal use is a drawing:
| Type | Example | How to Value |
|---|---|---|
| Cash | Transferring money from the business bank account to a personal account | Amount withdrawn |
| Goods | A shop owner taking stock home for personal use | Cost price (or selling price for VAT purposes if VAT-registered) |
| Use of business assets | Using a business vehicle for personal journeys | Estimated value of personal use |
| Payment of personal expenses | Business pays the owner’s home electricity bill | Amount paid |
Recording Drawings
Drawings are recorded in a drawings account, which is a contra-equity account. At the end of the financial year, the drawings account is closed by transferring its balance to the owner’s capital account.
Cash Drawing
The owner withdraws £2,000 from the business bank account:
| Account | Debit (£) | Credit (£) |
|---|---|---|
| Drawings | 2,000 | |
| Bank | 2,000 |
Goods Drawing
A sole trader who runs a grocery shop takes £150 of stock for personal consumption:
| Account | Debit (£) | Credit (£) |
|---|---|---|
| Drawings | 150 | |
| Purchases | 150 |
Year-End Transfer to Capital
At the year end, total drawings of £28,000 are transferred to the capital account:
| Account | Debit (£) | Credit (£) |
|---|---|---|
| Capital account | 28,000 | |
| Drawings | 28,000 |
Drawings in the Financial Statements
Statement of Financial Position (Balance Sheet)
In a sole trader’s balance sheet, the capital section shows:
| Owner’s Capital | £ |
|---|---|
| Opening capital | 20,000 |
| Add: Net profit for the year | 35,000 |
| Less: Drawings | (28,000) |
| Closing capital | 27,000 |
No Appearance in the Income Statement
Drawings are never deducted as an expense in the income statement. The profit figure represents the earnings of the business before any withdrawals by the owner.
Drawings in a Partnership
In a partnership , each partner has their own capital account and current account. Drawings are typically debited to the partner’s current account:
| Partner | Opening Current Account (£) | Share of Profit (£) | Drawings (£) | Closing Current Account (£) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Partner A | 5,000 | 40,000 | (32,000) | 13,000 |
| Partner B | 3,000 | 30,000 | (28,000) | 5,000 |
| Partner C | 2,000 | 20,000 | (22,000) | 0 |
If a partner’s current account goes into debit (negative), it means the partner has withdrawn more than their accumulated share of profits. The partnership agreement should address how this is managed – in some partnerships, interest is charged on overdrawn current accounts.
Partnership Agreement
A well-drafted partnership agreement typically covers:
- Whether partners can draw a fixed monthly amount (an advance against profit)
- The maximum drawings permitted in any period
- Whether interest is charged on excess drawings
- Whether interest is allowed on capital balances
- The process for approving drawings beyond the agreed limits
Drawings and Tax
Income Tax
Drawings themselves are not taxable. The sole trader or partner is taxed on their share of the business profit, regardless of how much or how little they actually withdraw.
| Item | Taxable? |
|---|---|
| Business profit of £50,000 | Yes – taxed as trading income |
| Drawings of £40,000 from the business | No – not a separate taxable event |
| Drawings of £60,000 (exceeding profit) | No – but the excess reduces capital |
A common misconception is that drawings are taxed like a salary. They are not. The owner pays income tax and National Insurance on the business profit, not on the drawings.
VAT on Goods Drawings
If a VAT-registered business owner takes goods for personal use, output VAT must be accounted for on the cost price (or open market value if the goods were not purchased for the business). This is because the business claimed input VAT when the goods were originally purchased, and HMRC requires that VAT to be repaid when the goods are put to private use.
National Insurance
Self-employed individuals pay Class 2 and Class 4 National Insurance based on their business profits, not on drawings. Class 2 is a flat weekly rate, and Class 4 is calculated as a percentage of profits between the lower and upper thresholds.
Drawings Versus Salary
The distinction between drawings and a salary reflects the different legal status of the business:
| Feature | Drawings | Salary |
|---|---|---|
| Business type | Sole trader or partnership | Limited company |
| Tax treatment | Not an expense; owner taxed on profit | Expense of the company; employee taxed under PAYE |
| National Insurance | Class 2 and Class 4 on profits | Employer’s and employee’s NIC on salary |
| Effect on business profit | No effect | Reduces company profit |
| Legal nature | Withdrawal of capital | Contractual payment for services |
Drawings Versus Dividends
In a limited company, the owner is a shareholder, not a sole trader. Payments to shareholders are dividends , not drawings:
| Feature | Drawings | Dividends |
|---|---|---|
| Business type | Unincorporated (sole trader/partnership) | Limited company |
| Source | Owner’s capital | Distributable profits (retained earnings) |
| Legal restriction | None (owner can withdraw as much as they wish) | Cannot exceed accumulated realised profits |
| Tax | Owner taxed on business profit | Company taxed on its profit; shareholder taxed on the dividend |
Excessive Drawings
There is no legal limit on drawings for a sole trader – the owner can withdraw any amount. However, excessive drawings have consequences:
- Reduced capital – the business has less money to invest, pay suppliers, or cover unexpected costs
- Negative capital – if drawings exceed cumulative profits plus capital introduced, the capital account becomes negative, meaning the business effectively owes money to the owner’s creditors
- Cash flow problems – withdrawing too much cash can leave the business unable to meet its obligations
- Insolvency risk – a business with severely depleted capital is more vulnerable to financial difficulty
Good practice is to set a regular drawings amount that reflects the anticipated profit for the year, adjusted periodically as actual results become clearer.