An accounting principle that requires expenses to be recorded in the same period as the revenues they help generate, ensuring accurate profit measurement.
The matching principle is fundamental to accrual accounting. It states that expenses should be recognized in the same accounting period as the related revenues, regardless of when cash is paid. This provides a true picture of profitability for each period. For example, if you spend on advertising in March to generate April sales, the ad expense should be matched to April's revenue. This principle drives many accounting practices: depreciation (matching asset cost to periods of use), accrued expenses, prepaid expenses, and inventory COGS calculations.
A company pays ₹12,00,000 for annual insurance in January. Instead of expensing all in January, the matching principle requires spreading ₹1,00,000/month across 12 months. January P&L shows only ₹1,00,000 insurance expense, and ₹11,00,000 appears as prepaid expense (asset).
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Financial statements become unreliable. Revenue might appear in one period while related costs appear in another, making it impossible to determine true profitability. This violates GAAP/IFRS and would be flagged by auditors.
No. Cash accounting records transactions when cash changes hands, ignoring the timing of revenue/expense relationships. This is why cash accounting is considered less accurate than accrual accounting for measuring business performance.
An accounting method where revenue and expenses are recorded when they are earned or incurred, regardless of when cash is exchanged.
The systematic allocation of the cost of a tangible asset over its useful life, representing the decline in value due to wear, use, or obsolescence.
The accounting principle that determines when and how revenue is recorded in the financial statements, based on when it is earned rather than when cash is received.
A financial statement that summarizes a company's revenues, costs, and expenses over a specific period to show net profit or loss.
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