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Aadil
AadilCurious
In: 1. Financial Accounting > Miscellaneous

What is a deferred tax liability?

What is a deferred tax liability?
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    1. Aditi
      2025-01-11T08:38:51+00:00Added an answer on January 11, 2025 at 8:38 am
      This answer was edited.

      Deferred Tax Liability

      A deferred tax liability represents an obligation to pay taxes in the future. These taxes are owed by a company but are not due to be paid until a future date.

      Companies that incur such an obligation prepare and maintain two financial reports every year: a tax statement and an income statement.

      This is because companies maintain their books as per book accounting rules (GAAP/IFRS), but they have to pay taxes according to tax accounting rules, and they each have to follow their own guidelines.

      For example, a tax statement follows the cash basis of accounting, and an income statement follows the accrual basis of accounting.

      Companies calculate their profit as per the accounting rules as well as tax laws known as accounting income and taxable income, respectively. Some differences arise due to the application of different provisions of law.

      These temporary differences are accounted for, recognized, and carried forward in the books of accounts and create deferred tax.

       

      Example

      Here is an example of deferred tax liability.

      In the given example, tax as per income statement is 70,000, whereas as per tax statement it is 56,000. This temporary difference is termed as deferred tax liability of 14,000.

      When accounting income is more than taxable income, it creates Deferred Tax Liability. It will be adjusted in the books of accounts during one or more subsequent year(s).

       

       

      How Does it Arise?

      There are several instances under which a company creates a deferred tax liability. Some other instances are:

      Depreciation Methods

      • One of the most common reasons for deferred tax liability is when a company uses different depreciation methods in the Income and Tax Statement.
      • Assets are depreciated by calculating the straight-line method in the Income Statement, while the written-down value method is used in the Tax Statement.
      • Since the straight-line value method produces lower depreciation when compared to the WDV method, accounting income is temporarily higher than taxable income.
      • The company recognises deferred tax liability as this difference between accounting income and taxable income.

      Treatment of Revenue & Expenses

      • Deferred tax liability can also arise when there is a difference in the way revenue and expenses are treated in books of accounts.
      • As mentioned earlier, accounting rules follow the accrual basis of accounting while tax laws follow the cash basis of accounting.
      • Meaning in the tax statement, income and expenses are recorded when they are received or paid, not when they are incurred or realised.
      • This difference in the treatment of revenue and expenses creates deferred tax liability.

       

       

      Impact on Financial Statements

      Recognising deferred tax liability and its subsequent effect on the company’s financial statement is important as it simplifies the process of auditing and analysing financial reports.

      Balance Sheet

      • Deferred tax liabilities are recorded on the liability side of the balance sheet under non-current liabilities.

      Cash Flow Statement

      • The deferred tax liability is added back to the net income in calculating cash flow from operating activities to show the actual cash flow.
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