What Are Trade Creditors?
A guide to trade creditors in UK accounting, covering the definition, balance sheet presentation, creditor days, payment terms, and the relationship with working capital.
Trade creditors (also called trade payables) are amounts owed by a business to its suppliers for goods and services received on credit. They represent the business’s obligation to pay for purchases that have been invoiced but not yet settled. In UK statutory accounts, trade creditors are reported within creditors: amounts falling due within one year on the balance sheet .
Trade creditors are a key component of working capital management and one of the most common forms of short-term liabilities .
Trade Creditors and Accounts Payable
The terms trade creditors and accounts payable are often used interchangeably, but there is a subtle distinction in UK statutory reporting:
| Term | Scope |
|---|---|
| Trade creditors | Amounts owed specifically for goods and services purchased in the ordinary course of trade |
| Accounts payable | A broader category that may include trade creditors, accruals, other creditors, and amounts owed to HMRC |
In the Companies Act format balance sheet, trade creditors is a specific line item within the broader creditors heading.
How Trade Creditors Arise
Trade creditors arise through the normal purchase cycle:
- The business orders goods or services from a supplier
- The supplier delivers the goods or performs the service
- The supplier issues an invoice setting out the amount due and payment terms
- The business records the invoice as a trade creditor (credit to trade creditors, debit to the relevant expense or asset account)
- The business pays the invoice on or before the due date
| Stage | Accounting Entry |
|---|---|
| Invoice received for £5,000 of stock | Debit purchases £5,000; Credit trade creditors £5,000 |
| Payment made to supplier | Debit trade creditors £5,000; Credit bank £5,000 |
Trade Creditors on the Balance Sheet
Trade creditors are classified as current liabilities because they are normally due for payment within 30 to 90 days:
| Creditors: amounts falling due within one year | £ |
|---|---|
| Trade creditors | 48,000 |
| Taxation and social security | 14,200 |
| Accruals and deferred income | 9,800 |
| Other creditors | 3,500 |
| Total | 75,500 |
The trade creditors balance at the year end represents the total of all unpaid supplier invoices at that date.
Payment Terms
The payment terms agreed with suppliers determine when invoices must be paid. Common terms in UK business:
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Net 30 | Payment due within 30 days of invoice date |
| Net 60 | Payment due within 60 days of invoice date |
| End of month + 30 | Payment due 30 days after the end of the month in which the invoice was raised |
| Cash on delivery (COD) | Payment required on receipt of goods |
| 2/10 net 30 | 2% discount if paid within 10 days, otherwise full amount due in 30 days |
| Proforma | Payment required before goods are dispatched |
Late Payment Legislation
The Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998 gives UK businesses the statutory right to charge interest on late payments at 8% above the Bank of England base rate, plus a fixed compensation amount. The Reporting on Payment Practices and Performance Regulations 2017 require large companies to report publicly on their payment practices and the proportion of invoices paid beyond agreed terms.
Creditor Days
Creditor days (also called days payable outstanding or DPO) measures how long, on average, a business takes to pay its suppliers:
Formula:
Creditor days = (Trade creditors / Credit purchases) x 365
Example: Trade creditors of £48,000 and annual credit purchases of £420,000:
Creditor days = (£48,000 / £420,000) x 365 = 42 days
| Creditor Days | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| Below agreed terms | Paying faster than required – may indicate poor cash management or early payment discount strategy |
| In line with agreed terms | Good payment discipline |
| Above agreed terms | Paying late – may damage supplier relationships and credit terms |
Trade Creditors and Working Capital
Trade creditors are a source of free short-term finance because the business has the use of the supplier’s goods or services before paying for them. Increasing creditor days (within agreed terms) releases cash for other purposes.
The relationship with working capital :
| Working Capital Component | Change | Effect on Cash |
|---|---|---|
| Trade creditors increase | Paying suppliers more slowly | Cash preserved |
| Trade creditors decrease | Paying suppliers more quickly | Cash consumed |
| Trade debtors increase | Collecting from customers more slowly | Cash consumed |
| Stock increases | More cash tied up in inventory | Cash consumed |
Effective working capital management balances the need to preserve cash with the importance of maintaining good supplier relationships.
Managing Trade Creditors
Best Practices
- Maintain an accurate purchase ledger – record all invoices promptly and reconcile supplier statements monthly
- Take advantage of early payment discounts – a 2% discount for paying 20 days early is equivalent to an annualised return of approximately 37%
- Negotiate favourable terms – longer payment terms reduce the pressure on cash flow
- Avoid late payment – late payment damages supplier relationships, may result in interest charges, and can lead to being placed on stop (cash on delivery only)
- Centralise payments – running payment cycles (weekly or fortnightly) ensures control and efficiency
Supplier Statement Reconciliation
Regular reconciliation of the purchase ledger to supplier statements is an essential internal control. Discrepancies may arise from:
| Issue | Cause |
|---|---|
| Invoice not recorded | Lost in transit or not forwarded to accounts |
| Payment not credited by supplier | Timing difference or misallocation |
| Credit note not applied | Return or allowance not processed |
| Duplicate invoice recorded | Same invoice entered twice |
Trade Creditors and VAT
When a VAT-registered business receives a purchase invoice including VAT, the accounting entry records the expense or asset net of VAT, with the VAT element posted to the VAT input tax account:
| Account | Debit (£) | Credit (£) |
|---|---|---|
| Purchases | 5,000 | |
| VAT input tax | 1,000 | |
| Trade creditors | 6,000 |
The trade creditor balance includes VAT because the full invoice amount is owed to the supplier. The input VAT is recovered separately from HMRC through the VAT return.
Trade Creditors in the Aged Creditors Report
An aged creditors report categorises outstanding invoices by the length of time they have been outstanding:
| Ageing Band | Amount (£) | % of Total |
|---|---|---|
| Current (not yet due) | 28,000 | 58% |
| 1-30 days overdue | 12,000 | 25% |
| 31-60 days overdue | 5,000 | 10% |
| Over 60 days overdue | 3,000 | 7% |
| Total | 48,000 | 100% |
This report helps management identify overdue balances, prioritise payments, and manage cash flow.
Audit of Trade Creditors
The audit of trade creditors focuses on completeness (ensuring all liabilities are recorded) rather than existence. Auditors typically:
- Reconcile the trade creditors balance to the purchase ledger
- Review supplier statement reconciliations
- Examine post-year-end payments to identify invoices that should have been accrued
- Test cut-off to ensure purchases are recorded in the correct period
- Confirm balances directly with key suppliers where necessary
The risk of understatement – failing to record a liability – is more significant than overstatement, because management may be tempted to exclude liabilities to improve the reported financial position.