If your business takes deposits or advance payments for projects or services (especially those delivered in another fiscal year), you might be paying taxes on money you haven’t earned yet. This happens when upfront payments are incorrectly logged as income. The result? Overstated revenue, higher taxes, and less cash flow.
This typically applies to:
The fix is simple: deferred revenue tracking. Let’s break it down.
Lets say Precision Builders takes 30% deposits for projects, covering materials and planning. They take on a project in November that carries into the next year, but they made one critical mistake: they recorded deposits as income in the year they were received.
🚫 What went wrong?
✅ The Fix: Precision Builders can begin treating deposits as deferred revenue—a current liability on the books until the project was completed. This can help defer their tax liability, clarify their finances, and help them choose when to focus on delivery vs growth.
💙 The Lesson: This problem only happens if the work you’re paid for crosses into the next year. If your deposits and delivery happen in the same year, this won’t apply.
Deferred Revenue is any unearned revenue that you've been paid but haven't delivered on yet.
To track it accurately - here's a simplified version what needs to happen:
This process ensures you:
So you know you have to track deferred revenue - but how do you actually do that in your accounting system?
Deferred revenue tracking helps businesses with projects extending into the next year:
Q: Does this apply if I complete my projects in the same year as the deposit?
A: Its less of a problem if you complete your projects within the year - however tracking your differed revenue can still give you a clearer picture of your business.
Q: Why is deferred revenue a liability?
A: It represents an obligation to deliver services or products before the money is yours to keep.
Q: Can I implement this mid-year?
A: Yes, but you should consult an accountant to adjust past records properly and stay compliant.