Accumulated income definition

What is Accumulated Income?

Accumulated income is that portion of a company’s net profits that are retained, rather than being remitted to investors as dividends. A business needs accumulated income to help fund its operations. This is especially important for a growing business, which typically requires a substantial amount of working capital to pay for its ongoing investments in receivables and inventory, as well as fixed asset purchases. It may also invest the funds in research and development or marketing activities, which are essential for growing sales.

The amount of accumulated income tends to be lowest in slow-growth businesses, where the management team has no internal use for the money and so elects to send it to investors in the form of dividends or stock repurchases.

Presentation of Accumulated Income

The aggregate amount of accumulated income appears in the retained earnings section of the balance sheet. We note the applicable balance sheet line item in the following exhibit.

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FAQs

Is Accumulated Income Taxable?

Accumulated income is not taxable to shareholders until it is distributed as dividends or otherwise transferred. However, a corporation may be subject to the accumulated earnings tax if it retains earnings beyond the reasonable needs of the business. This tax is designed to prevent companies from avoiding shareholder-level dividend taxation by indefinitely accumulating profits.

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