Understanding Modified Cash-Basis in Accounting, Pros & Cons

Modified Cash Basis

Investopedia / Madelyn Goodnight

What Is Modified Cash Basis?

Modified cash basis is an accounting method that combines elements of the two primary bookkeeping practices: cash and accrual accounting. It seeks to get the best of both worlds, recording sales and expenses for long-term assets on an accrual basis and those of short-term assets on a cash basis. The goal here is to provide a clearer financial picture without dealing with the costs of switching to full-blown accrual accounting.

Key Takeaways

  • The modified cash basis is a bookkeeping practice that combines elements of the two major accounting methods: cash and accrual.
  • Long-term assets are recorded on an accrual basis and short-term assets are registered using the cash accounting method.
  • Accrual basis methods produce a clearer picture of business performance while using cash basis records for other items helps to keep costs down where possible.
  • The modified cash method may only be used for internal purposes because it does not comply with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), or the generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). 
  • Both IFRS and GAAP require that public companies use the accrual method of accounting for their financial statements, with some caveats for GAAP.

Understanding Modified Cash Basis

To understand how a modified cash basis works, it is first essential to break down how traditional bookkeeping practices are influenced by function.

Cash basis accounting recognizes income when it is received and expenses when they are paid for. Its most significant advantage is its simplicity.

In contrast, accrual accounting recognizes income when a sale is fulfilled rather than when it is paid for and records expenses incurred, irrespective of cash movement.

Accrual accounting is a slightly more complicated method. Still, it does benefit from enabling a company to match revenue and its associated expenses and understand what it costs to run the business each month and how much it makes.

The modified cash basis borrows elements from both cash and accrual accounting, depending on the nature of the asset. It consists of the following features:

Advantages and Disadvantages of Modified Cash Basis

Advantages

The modified cash basis method can better balance short-term and long-term accounting items by borrowing elements from both techniques. Short-term items, like a regular monthly utility expense (a bill), are recorded according to the cash basis (as there is a related inflow or outflow of cash), which results in an income statement populated mainly with items based on the cash basis. Long-term items that do not change within a given financial year, such as a long-term investment property, plant, and equipment, are recorded using the accrual basis.

Accrual basis methods produce a clearer picture of business performance while using cash basis records for other items helps keep costs down where possible; maintaining a set of complete accrual accounting records is more time-consuming.

Disadvantages

If financial statements are subject to formal reviews, such as an analysis performed by auditors, investors, or a bank, the modified cash basis method will prove inadequate. The modified cash method may only be used for internal purposes because it does not comply with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) or the generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), which outline what procedures companies must follow when preparing their officially reported financial statements.

This makes a modified cash basis accounting popular with private companies. It also means that publicly traded companies using this method cannot get their financial statements signed off by auditors. Consistency is required, so transactions recorded on a cash basis must be converted to accrual. This is so because, under IFRS and GAAP, public companies are required to report their financials using only the accrual method of accounting because of its matching principle.

For tax reporting purposes, companies with average annual gross receipts of less than $25 million for the last three consecutive years may choose either the cash or accrual accounting method.

Article Sources
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  1. Corporate Finance Institute. "Modified Cash Basis." Accessed Dec. 20, 2021.

  2. Corporate Finance Institute. "What Is the Accrual Principle?" Accessed Dec. 20, 2021.

  3. Internal Revenue Service. "Publication 538: Accounting Periods and Methods." Page 9. Accessed Dec. 20, 2021.

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