p&l A/c "dr" show examble
an deferred revenue is known as accounting
What Did you mean by deferred revenue tax
P&L A/C......Dr To Deffered revenue Expendature A/C
Deferred expenditure refers to expenses incurred which do not apply to the current accounting period. Instead, they are debited to a 'Deferred expenditure' account in the non-current assets area of your chart of accounts. When they become current, they can then be transferred to the profit and loss account as normal.
The deferred revenue expenditure refers to the incurred company expenses in one accounting period benefited for more than one accounting period. The common example of this expenditure is the cost of advertising and business licensing.
A deferred revenue expenditure is that where the benefit the expenditure can be had for more than ONE accounting period and less than FIVE accounting periods. There are no hard and fast rules that the period is linted to 1 - 5. It is just an assumption. It stands as an expired cost after the business entity has had the complete benefits. It is written off every year. saurav singh B.E(MECH) & MBA(FINANCE)
yes it is a part of deffered revenue exp
ok
Deferred revenue is actually classified as a liability on the balance sheet, not a revenue or sales account. It represents money received by a company for goods or services that have not yet been delivered or performed. As the company fulfills its obligations, the deferred revenue is recognized as actual revenue on the income statement. This accounting treatment ensures that revenue is matched with the period in which the service is provided or the product is delivered.
Revenue expenditure is that which is incurred in anticipation of generating future income for not more than one yr for example- exp incurred in sales promotion and advertisement of an enterprise. Whereas deferred revenue exp. are those for which payment has been made or a liability has been incurred on the presumption that it will be of benefit over a subsequent period or periods
Deferred.
1) Revenue 2) Expenditure 3) Conversion 4) Fixed Assets