Bad Debt Expense: Complete Guide (Methods, Journal Entries, Examples)

by Eduyush Team

Bad Debt Expense: Methods, Journal Entries Guide

Key Takeaways

  • Bad debt expense is the cost a business recognises when it determines that a credit sale will not be collected.
  • GAAP requires the allowance method for most businesses; the direct write-off method is only acceptable for immaterial amounts or tax purposes.
  • Under the allowance method, XYZ Corp estimates $10,000 in bad debt expense (2% × $500,000 credit sales).
  • Proper accounting keeps your financial statements accurate and compliant with accrual accounting principles.

Bad debt expense is the portion of accounts receivable that a business estimates will never be collected from customers. It is recorded as an operating expense on the income statement to match the cost of uncollectible credit sales with the revenue they generated — a core requirement of accrual accounting.

Whether you are studying for a CPA exam, preparing financial statements, or managing a business's books, understanding bad debt expense is essential. This guide covers both methods, journal entries, real-world examples, and every supporting topic in one place.


What Is Bad Debt Expense?

When a business sells goods or services on credit, it records a receivable — an amount the customer promises to pay. Not every customer pays. Bad debt expense captures the estimated value of those receivables that will ultimately go uncollected.

Think of it this way: if XYZ Corp sells $500,000 on credit and knows from experience that about 2% of that will never be collected, it recognises $10,000 as bad debt expense. That $10,000 sits on the income statement as an expense and reduces the net receivable balance on the balance sheet through a contra-asset account called the Allowance for Doubtful Accounts.

Common Terms You Will Encounter

  • Bad debt expense — the income statement charge
  • Allowance for doubtful accounts — the contra-asset on the balance sheet
  • Write-off — removing a specific uncollectible balance from the books
  • Recovery — a previously written-off customer who pays
  • Accounts receivable (A/R) — amounts owed by customers for credit sales
Core Formula:
Bad Debt Expense = Estimated Uncollectible Amount

Using Percentage of Sales:
Bad Debt Expense = Credit Sales × Bad Debt Rate
= $500,000 × 2% = $10,000

Why Bad Debt Expense Matters

Recording bad debt expense is not just a compliance exercise — it directly shapes how investors, lenders, and managers view a company's financial health.

1. Accuracy of Financial Statements

If XYZ Corp shows $120,000 in accounts receivable but $10,000 of that will never come in, reporting the full $120,000 overstates assets. The allowance method reduces net A/R to $110,000, giving a realistic picture to anyone reading the balance sheet.

2. Matching Principle

Accrual accounting requires expenses to be matched to the revenue they relate to. The bad debt expense from a 2025 sale should be recorded in 2025, not in 2026 when a customer finally defaults. The allowance method enforces this matching.

3. Decision-Making

Knowing your bad debt rate guides credit policy. If XYZ Corp's rate climbs from 2% to 4%, that signals tighter credit terms are needed — before losses compound.

4. Tax Implications

The direct write-off method — where you only record a bad debt when a specific account is confirmed uncollectible — is required for U.S. tax purposes (IRS rules) but not accepted under GAAP for financial reporting.


The Two Methods Explained

Bad debt expense is recorded using one of two methods, each with its own logic, journal entries, and use cases.

Feature Allowance Method Direct Write-Off Method
Timing Estimated at period-end before specific defaults Recorded only when account is confirmed uncollectible
GAAP Compliant? Yes — required under GAAP Only for immaterial amounts
Balance Sheet Impact Creates Allowance for Doubtful Accounts (contra asset) Directly reduces Accounts Receivable
Matching Principle Satisfied — expense matched to revenue period Not satisfied — timing mismatch
Tax Use Not acceptable for U.S. taxes Required by IRS
Best For Financial reporting, large businesses Small businesses, tax filings

Allowance Method — Overview

The allowance method is the GAAP-preferred approach. Instead of waiting for a customer to default, a company estimates its bad debt expense at the end of each period and records it proactively.

Two Estimation Approaches

1. Percentage of Sales (Income Statement Approach)

XYZ Corp had credit sales of $500,000 and a historical bad debt rate of 2%:

Bad Debt Expense = $500,000 × 2% = $10,000

2. Aging of Receivables (Balance Sheet Approach)

XYZ Corp's $120,000 in receivables is broken into age buckets. Older balances carry higher default risk:

Age Bracket Balance Est. Default % Est. Bad Debt
0–30 days $60,000 1% $600
31–60 days $30,000 3% $900
61–90 days $15,000 10% $1,500
91–120 days $10,000 25% $2,500
120+ days $5,000 90% $4,500
Total $120,000 $10,000

Both approaches yield $10,000 in this example. For a complete walkthrough of the allowance method, see our dedicated article: Allowance Method for Bad Debts.

Journal Entry (Allowance Method)

To record estimated bad debt expense:

Dr. Bad Debt Expense         $10,000
  Cr. Allowance for Doubtful Accounts   $10,000

Direct Write-Off Method — Overview

The direct write-off method records bad debt expense only when a specific account is determined to be uncollectible. There is no estimation — no allowance account is created.

When Customer ABC's $3,000 invoice (180+ days overdue) is finally deemed uncollectible, XYZ Corp records:

Dr. Bad Debt Expense         $3,000
  Cr. Accounts Receivable – Customer ABC   $3,000
Warning: This method violates the matching principle under GAAP. The revenue from Customer ABC's sale may have been recorded in a prior period, but the expense hits only in the current period when the default is confirmed. This distorts profitability comparisons between periods.

For a full breakdown, visit: Direct Write-Off Method Explained.


Impact on Financial Statements

Bad debt expense touches every major financial statement. Understanding where it appears — and how it flows through the accounts — is critical for interpreting financial reports correctly.

Income Statement

Bad debt expense appears as an operating expense (sometimes under "Selling, General and Administrative"). For XYZ Corp: $10,000 reduces operating income.

Balance Sheet

The Allowance for Doubtful Accounts is a contra-asset account that nets against Accounts Receivable:

Line Item Amount
Accounts Receivable (gross) $120,000
Less: Allowance for Doubtful Accounts ($10,000)
Net Accounts Receivable $110,000

Learn more about how this fits into the broader financial statement structure. For the trial balance perspective, see What is a Trial Balance.

Statement of Cash Flows

Bad debt expense is a non-cash expense. Under the indirect method, it is added back to net income in the operating activities section of the cash flow statement.


Full Example: XYZ Corp

Let's trace the complete bad debt accounting cycle for XYZ Corp across a financial year.

Facts

  • Total credit sales: $500,000
  • Accounts receivable balance: $120,000
  • Estimated bad debt rate: 2% of credit sales = $10,000
  • Customer ABC owes $3,000 — 180+ days overdue, deemed uncollectible in March

Step 1 — Year-End Estimate (Allowance Method)

Dr. Bad Debt Expense         $10,000
  Cr. Allowance for Doubtful Accounts   $10,000
(To record estimated bad debts: $500,000 × 2%)

Step 2 — Write-Off of Customer ABC

Dr. Allowance for Doubtful Accounts   $3,000
  Cr. Accounts Receivable – Customer ABC   $3,000
(To write off uncollectible balance — 180+ days overdue)
Pro Tip: Notice that writing off Customer ABC's account does not affect the income statement under the allowance method. The expense was already recorded in Step 1. This is the key distinction from the direct write-off method.

Step 3 — Recovery (If Customer ABC Pays Later)

If Customer ABC unexpectedly pays the $3,000 in a subsequent period, two entries are needed. See the full treatment in our Bad Debt Recovery article.


Explore All Articles in This Cluster

This pillar page connects to five in-depth supporting articles. Each one dives deeper into a specific aspect of bad debt accounting:

Also see our related cluster on Retained Earnings and current assets treatment on the Current Assets page.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is bad debt expense in simple terms?

Bad debt expense is the amount a business writes off as a cost when it determines that a customer will not pay their outstanding invoice. It is an operating expense that reduces net income on the income statement.

Is bad debt expense a debit or credit?

Bad debt expense is always recorded as a debit because it is an expense that increases with debits. The offsetting credit goes to the Allowance for Doubtful Accounts (under the allowance method) or directly to Accounts Receivable (under the direct write-off method).

What is the difference between bad debt expense and allowance for doubtful accounts?

Bad debt expense is an income statement item — the periodic charge for estimated uncollectibles. Allowance for doubtful accounts is the cumulative balance sheet account (a contra asset) that accumulates those estimates and is used to write off specific accounts when they default.

Which method does GAAP require for bad debts?

GAAP requires the allowance method for any business with material receivables. The direct write-off method is only permitted where bad debts are immaterial. The allowance method satisfies the matching principle, which the direct write-off method does not.

How do you calculate bad debt expense using the percentage of sales method?

Multiply total credit sales by the historical bad debt rate. XYZ Corp example: $500,000 × 2% = $10,000. This rate is usually derived from several years of historical collection data.

Does writing off a bad debt affect the income statement?

Under the allowance method, writing off a specific account (e.g., Customer ABC's $3,000) does not affect the income statement — the expense was already recorded when the estimate was made. Under the direct write-off method, the write-off itself creates the expense entry and directly impacts the income statement at that time.

Where does bad debt expense appear on the cash flow statement?

Bad debt expense is a non-cash charge. Under the indirect method of cash flow reporting, it is added back to net income in the operating activities section, similar to depreciation.


About the Author

Eduyush Team — The Eduyush content team comprises qualified accountants, CPA exam educators, and financial professionals with hands-on experience in GAAP, IFRS, and professional accounting curricula. Our goal is to make technical accounting concepts accessible, accurate, and exam-ready for students worldwide.

Content reviewed for accuracy against current GAAP standards and CPA exam blueprints.

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