Deferred revenue explained

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Deferred revenue: an accounting term that deals with a specific type of timing difference between getting paid by your customer and providing goods or services in return. This short video starts with real-life examples of deferred revenue in companies in very different industries, we subsequently discuss a common definition of deferred revenue, talk about why this is such a great business model, and review the deferred revenue accounting journal entries.

⏱️TIMESTAMPS⏱️
00:00 Introduction to deferred revenue
00:27 Deferred revenue examples
00:59 Deferred revenue: giftcards
01:31 Deferred revenue: subscription services
01:51 Deferred revenue: passenger tickets and frequent flyer miles
02:40 Deferred revenue definition
03:01 Deferred revenue business model
03:25 Deferred revenue journal entries

Let’s start with some examples. What do Home Depot, the world’s largest home improvement retailer, Salesforce, a leading provider of enterprise software, and United Continental Holdings, a transporter of people and cargo, have in common? Each of these companies has a significant amount of deferred revenue. Home Depot $1.7 billion, Salesforce $5.5 billion, and United $8.6 billion. If you have any more examples of deferred revenue, please share them as a comment!

How does deferred revenue work for Home Depot? Here are some excerpts from Home Depot’s annual report. “When we receive payment from customers before the customer has taken possession of the merchandise or the service has been performed, the amount received is recorded as Deferred Revenue in the accompanying Consolidated Balance Sheets until the sale or service is complete. We also record Deferred Revenue for the sale of gift cards and recognize this revenue upon the redemption of gift cards in Net Sales.”

How does deferred revenue work for Salesforce? “Deferred revenue primarily consists of billings or payments received in advance of revenue recognition from subscription services … and is recognized as the revenue recognition criteria are met. … We generally invoice customers in annual installments.”

How does deferred revenue work for United? United actually has two types of deferred revenue, that are recognized in separate accounts on the balance sheet. The value of unused passenger tickets is included in current liabilities as Advance ticket sales until the time the transportation is provided: $3.7 billion. The second type of deferred revenue relates to frequent flyer miles. “Mileage Plus program participants earn miles by flying on United and certain other participating airlines. …. The Company records its obligation for future award redemptions using a deferred revenue model. … The miles are recorded in Frequent flyer deferred revenue on the Company’s consolidated balance sheet and recognized into revenue when transportation is provided.” This liability is $4.9 billion.

So what is the common theme, and an accurate definition of deferred revenue? Deferred revenue is a balance sheet account (on the liability side, what a company owes) representing the obligation to deliver goods or perform services in the future for which billing has already occurred and/or cash has been received.

If that accounting definition of deferred revenue still sounds a bit cryptic to you, then think of the business model in construction: step one is to sign a contract for work to be performed, then the construction contractor gets a down-payment from the customer, the contractor uses this to buy materials and labor, delivers the finished project, and recognizes the revenue.

Here’s how the journal entries for deferred revenue work step by step. We will record the journal entries for a two year service contract that runs from mid-2018 to mid-2020. The customer pays the full amount of the contract upfront: debit cash on the assets side of the balance sheet, credit deferred revenue on the liability side of the balance sheet. For 2018, we book six months’ worth of revenue: debit deferred revenue on the balance sheet, credit revenue in the income statement. At the end of 2018, 18 months of deferred revenue for the remainder of the contract is still on the balance sheet. For 2019, we book twelve months’ worth of revenue: debit deferred revenue on the balance sheet, credit revenue in the income statement. For 2020, we book the remaining six months of revenue. At the end of the contract, the sum of the debits and the credits in the deferred revenue account should be equal.

Philip de Vroe (The Finance Storyteller) aims to make strategy, finance and leadership enjoyable and easier to understand. Learn the business vocabulary to join the conversation with your CEO at your company. Understand how financial statements work in order to make better stock market investment decisions. Philip delivers training in various formats: YouTube videos, classroom sessions, webinars, and business simulations. Connect with me through Linked In!
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Where did you come across the term "deferred revenue"? Let me know by commenting below!

TheFinanceStoryteller
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that was a clear description of deffered revenue I ever received in my lfie, Thumps up

mazwamahlegwebu
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I have a business where i sold ebooks, and when i was starting and launch my first ebook, i do a presale, so with that money i will finance the website. The great advantage is that the ebook cost me $0 (is a PDF). ¡Great success!

davidroldan
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Thank you. Really enjoyed the explanation

marthashalom-aviela
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Hi! I enjoyed your video. I think Tesla's FSD sales is another example of deferred revenue. And I have a question. When they do the wide release of FSD in North America according to Elon (🤞 😅), will they have significantly increased revenue due to this realized deferred revenue? Or is there any rule to realise the deferred revenue? Is it on their own? Again, than you for your video.

CyberDude
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Is all the credit stored in starbucks accounts considered Deferred Revenue? Starbucks owes the service (Coffee) to the customers in the future but they have already received the payments/credits?

aayushchhabra
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So if say Activision sells pre-orders for the next Call of Duty game and people buy the pre-order, that deferred...unrecognized revenue (because the game has not been released or delivered yet), would be a current liability on Activision's balance sheet? Is such deferred revenue in this case increasing Activision's cash balance or not, and what happens when customers cancel their pre-order, does the cash balance on current assets, go down?

skipeboi
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Would amazon prime memberships and gift cards be considered as deferred revenue ?

RUO
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But in my accounting books Deferred Revenue expenses is treated as a long term or non current asset

blast
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What is the difference between prepaid income and deferred revenue

jeswinsamuel
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What's the difference between deferred revenue and accural received?

joyceleung
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So then Deferred revenue and Unearned service revenue are the same thing?

labeebchy
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Microsoft has about 32B of deferred revenue

joshkogan
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3:34 So if you break deferred revenue into debits and credits...it is essentially recorded as both a debit and credit (in terms of accounting) at the time of inception? In other words an asset is gained but liability is also incurred?

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