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Accrued Liability

Accrued liability in accounting: a recorded obligation for expenses already incurred but not yet paid.

An accrued liability is a liability recognized for an obligation that already exists at the reporting date even though payment has not yet been made.

In practice, an accrued liability is often the balance-sheet result of booking an accrued expense or another period-end adjustment.

Typical sources

  • payroll earned but unpaid
  • interest incurred but unpaid
  • taxes owed but not yet settled
  • utilities or services already consumed before billing

Typical journal logic

1Dr Expense
2  Cr Accrued Liability

When payment is made later:

1Dr Accrued Liability
2  Cr Cash

Accrued liability vs accounts payable

Both are obligations, but they are not identical:

  • Accounts Payable is often tied to supplier invoices and trade-credit processing.
  • Accrued liability often covers estimated or period-end obligations recognized before the invoice or formal settlement arrives.

Why it matters

Accrued liabilities keep the balance sheet aligned with the real obligations created during the period. If they are missed, current liabilities are understated and earnings can be overstated.

Revised on Monday, May 18, 2026