A prepayment is a payment made in advance for goods or services that have not yet been received or consumed. In accounting terms, it represents a current asset on the balance sheet because the business has a right to receive the goods or service in the future.

Prepayments are the mirror image of accruals . While an accrual recognises an expense before the cash is paid, a prepayment recognises the cash payment before the expense is incurred. Both exist to ensure expenses are matched to the correct accounting period under the accruals concept required by FRS 102 and the Companies Act 2006.

How Prepayments Arise

Prepayments occur whenever a business pays for something before the benefit is received. Common scenarios include:

Prepayment TypeTypical Arrangement
InsuranceAnnual premium paid upfront at renewal
RentQuarterly rent paid in advance
SubscriptionsAnnual software or professional memberships
Licence feesAnnual or multi-year licences paid at the start
Service contractsMaintenance contracts paid annually in advance
RatesBusiness rates sometimes paid in advance

Example: Annual Insurance Premium

A company pays its annual insurance premium of £6,000 on 1 October. The company’s financial year ends on 31 March.

At the year end, the company has consumed 6 months of coverage (October to March) but paid for 12 months. The remaining 6 months (April to September) is a prepayment.

Amount consumed: £6,000 x 6/12 = £3,000 Prepayment: £6,000 x 6/12 = £3,000

Recording Prepayments

Initial Payment

When the insurance premium is paid on 1 October:

AccountDebit (£)Credit (£)
Insurance expense6,000
Bank6,000

Year-End Adjustment

At 31 March, the prepaid element must be moved from the expense account to the balance sheet:

AccountDebit (£)Credit (£)
Prepayments3,000
Insurance expense3,000

This reduces the insurance expense in the income statement from £6,000 to £3,000, correctly matching the cost to the period of benefit.

Release in the Next Period

At the start of the new financial year (1 April), the prepayment is reversed so the expense is recognised in the correct period:

AccountDebit (£)Credit (£)
Insurance expense3,000
Prepayments3,000

For a detailed guide to the journal entries involved, see the journal entry article.

Prepayments on the Balance Sheet

Prepayments are classified as current assets and are typically presented within debtors on the balance sheet:

Debtors£
Trade debtors48,000
Other debtors3,200
Prepayments and accrued income9,500
Total60,700

Under FRS 102, prepayments that relate to a period of more than one year from the balance sheet date should be classified as non-current assets. For example, a three-year software licence paid upfront would have both a current and non-current prepayment component.

Prepayments Versus Other Items

ItemCash Paid?Expense Incurred?Classification
PrepaymentYesNot yetCurrent asset
AccrualNot yetYesCurrent liability
Trade payableNot yetYes (invoiced)Current liability
Accounts receivableNot yet (by customer)Revenue earnedCurrent asset

The key distinction is timing: prepayments represent cash outflows that precede the consumption of the goods or service, while accruals represent consumption that precedes the cash outflow.

Practical Examples

Example 1: Quarterly Rent Paid in Advance

A company pays quarterly rent of £9,000 on 1 March for the quarter March to May. The year ends on 31 March.

  • Rent for March (1 month): £3,000 is expense for the current year
  • Rent for April-May (2 months): £6,000 is a prepayment

31 March adjustment:

AccountDebit (£)Credit (£)
Prepayments6,000
Rent expense6,000

Example 2: Annual Software Subscription

The company pays £2,400 on 1 January for a 12-month software subscription. Year end is 31 March.

  • January to March (3 months consumed): £600 expense
  • April to December (9 months remaining): £1,800 prepayment

31 March adjustment:

AccountDebit (£)Credit (£)
Prepayments1,800
Software expense1,800

Example 3: Multi-Year Licence

A company pays £15,000 on 1 April for a 3-year software licence. Year end is 31 March.

PeriodAmount (£)Classification
Year 1 (current year expense)5,000Income statement
Year 2 (due within one year)5,000Current asset (prepayment)
Year 3 (due after one year)5,000Non-current asset (prepayment)

Prepayments and the Income Statement

The purpose of prepayment accounting is to ensure the income statement shows only the expenses that relate to the current period. Without prepayment adjustments:

ScenarioInsurance Expense ShownCorrect?
No adjustment£6,000 (full premium)No, only 6 months relate to this year
With prepayment adjustment£3,000 (6 months)Yes

Failing to recognise prepayments overstates expenses and understates profit in the year of payment, while understating expenses and overstating profit in the following year.

Prepayments and VAT

For most prepayments, VAT is reclaimed at the time the invoice is received, not when the expense is released to the income statement. This means the prepayment recorded on the balance sheet is the net amount (excluding VAT), because the VAT has already been claimed from HMRC.

Example: Insurance premium of £6,000 (insurance is exempt from VAT in the UK):

The full £6,000 is the prepayment basis since no VAT is involved. However, for a taxable prepayment such as a maintenance contract:

  • Invoice: £1,200 + £240 VAT = £1,440
  • VAT input tax of £240 is claimed immediately
  • Prepayment is based on the net £1,200

Prepayments and Corporation Tax

For corporation tax purposes, HMRC generally follows the accounting treatment. Expenses are deductible in the period to which they relate, so the prepayment adjustment aligns the tax deduction with the correct period.

However, some prepayments have specific tax rules:

  • Lease premiums: A capital element of a lease premium may be spread over the life of the lease for tax purposes
  • Professional subscriptions: Deductible in full when paid if covering a period of 12 months or less
  • Training costs: Generally deductible when incurred, regardless of when the training takes place

Prepayments in Monthly Accounts

For businesses preparing monthly management accounts, prepayments ensure that costs are spread evenly across the months to which they relate. Without monthly prepayment processing:

  • January (when the annual subscription is paid) would show an artificially high expense
  • February to December would show artificially low expenses

This distorts monthly profitability analysis and makes it harder for managers to track performance accurately, undermining financial management .

Common Mistakes with Prepayments

Failing to Release Prepayments

The most common error is recording the prepayment at year end but failing to release it in the following period. This results in:

  • An asset remaining on the balance sheet that no longer represents future benefit
  • Expenses being understated in the period the benefit is consumed

Incorrect Apportionment

Splitting the prepayment incorrectly between periods overstates or understates expenses in each affected period. The calculation must be based on the period of benefit, not simply divided equally across calendar months if the benefit period does not align with calendar months.

Not Recognising Non-Current Prepayments

Multi-year prepayments should have their non-current portion classified separately. Keeping the entire amount as a current asset misstates the company’s working capital position.

Prepaying Amounts That Should Be Capitalised

Some advance payments relate to the acquisition of fixed assets rather than expenses. A deposit on a new vehicle, for example, is a prepayment against a capital asset, not a revenue prepayment. It should be classified within fixed assets or as a capital advance, not within current asset prepayments.

Prepayments and Working Capital

Prepayments form part of working capital and are included in the calculation of current assets . While they are less liquid than cash or accounts receivable (they cannot be easily converted to cash), they represent a real economic benefit.

When analysing working capital:

ComponentDirection of Cash Flow
Increase in prepaymentsCash outflow (reduces operating cash flow)
Decrease in prepaymentsCash released (increases operating cash flow)

Companies with large prepayment balances are effectively financing their suppliers in advance, which has an opportunity cost. Negotiating payment terms that avoid large upfront payments can improve cash flow management.