
Bad Debt Reserve
A bad debt reserve is the dollar amount of receivables that a company or financial institution does not expect to actually collect. When a specific receivable or loan balance is actually in default, the company reduces the bad debt reserve balance and reduces the receivable balance because the default is no longer simply part of a bad debt estimate. A bad debt reserve is a valuation account used to estimate the portion of a company's accounts receivables or a bank's loan portfolio that may ultimately default or become uncollectible. A bad debt reserve estimates the portion of a company's or financial institution's accounts receivables or loan portfolio that may default or become uncollectible. If a company has $1 million in receivables but one of its customers, which owes $50,000, is undergoing problems in its own business, the company might push the entire $50,000 to bad debt reserve.

What Is a Bad Debt Reserve?
A bad debt reserve is the dollar amount of receivables that a company or financial institution does not expect to actually collect. This includes business payments due and loan repayments. A bad reserve is also known as an allowance for doubtful accounts (ADA).




How Bad Debt Reserves Work
A bad debt reserve is a valuation account used to estimate the portion of a company's accounts receivables or a bank's loan portfolio that may ultimately default or become uncollectible. There are two benefits from this reserve.
For accounting purposes, the bad debt reserve allows the company or bank to state the face value of its receivables or loans. The reserve resides in a different area of the balance sheet, so the net result is that the value of receivables/loans reflects their expected value. Of course, if some of the bad debts pay, the result would be a bump to the bottom line.
The second benefit is a margin for error with regard to planning cash flows. If the company is prepared for default, then it will not be as affected by it.
When a specific receivable or loan balance is actually in default, the company reduces the bad debt reserve balance and reduces the receivable balance because the default is no longer simply part of a bad debt estimate. After this entry, the accounting records have a balance in bad debt expense and a reduction in the loan receivable balance for the loan that actually defaulted.
If a company has $1 million in receivables but one of its customers, which owes $50,000, is undergoing problems in its own business, the company might push the entire $50,000 to bad debt reserve. It still has $1 million in receivables but expects that in the end, it will only be worth $950,000.
How much a company keeps in reserve depends on the company, management, and the industry it is in. Some use a simple percentage of sales or a historical average. An alternative could be based on the debt's age, with the older debts less likely to pay. In some cases, a company might rate each customer individually. Still, others might use a combination of a percentage plus scrutiny of its riskiest accounts.
Bad Debt Reserves As a Health Measure
Most companies and banks keep a bad debt reserve because some percentage of customers will fail to pay. Analysts keep track of changes in bad debt reserves, which can uncover other financial health problems in a company. This includes how effectively a company manages the credit it extends to customers.
For a company, the most glaring problem might be a sharp increase in the reserve as it does business with riskier customers. This could jeopardize the company's cash flow.
On the other end of the spectrum, the company may pay out its reserves now to give off a weaker current condition. Future performance would look better, in contrast, because the estimate for doubtful accounts would appear lower.
Related terms:
Accounts Receivable (AR) & Example
Accounts receivable is the balance of money due to a firm for goods or services delivered or used but not yet paid for by customers. read more
Allowance for Bad Debt
An allowance for bad debt is a valuation account used to estimate the amount of a firm's receivables that may ultimately be uncollectible. read more
Allowance for Doubtful Accounts
An allowance for doubtful accounts is a contra-asset account that reduces the total receivables reported to reflect only the amounts expected to be paid. read more
Average Collection Period
The average collection period is the amount of time it takes for a business to receive payments owed by its clients in terms of accounts receivable. read more
Bad Debt
Bad debt is an expense that a business incurs once the repayment of credit previously extended to a customer is estimated to be uncollectible. read more
Cash Flow
Cash flow is the net amount of cash and cash equivalents being transferred into and out of a business. read more
Contra Account
A contra account is an account used in a general ledger to reduce the value of a related account. A contra account's natural balance is the opposite of the associated account. read more
Non-performing Asset (NPA)
A non-performing asset refers to loans or advances that are in jeopardy of default. read more
Non-Notification Loan
A non-notification loan is a full-recourse loan that is securitized by accounts receivable (AR). read more