Learn what debt ratio means, how to calculate it, and why a company can look more or less leveraged depending on how much of its assets are debt-financed.
The debt ratio measures what share of a company’s assets is financed by debt.
It is one of the simplest leverage metrics because it relates debt directly to the asset base the company controls.
Some analysts use total liabilities in practice, while others focus on interest-bearing debt. That definition difference matters, so comparisons should use a consistent method.
Suppose a company has:
$4 million$10 millionThen:
The debt ratio is 40%.
That means 40% of the asset base is financed by debt.
The ratio helps answer a straightforward question:
How dependent is the company on borrowed funds?
That matters because a higher reliance on debt can:
In general:
But the right level depends on the industry. Asset-heavy or stable-cash-flow businesses often support more leverage than fast-changing or speculative businesses.
The debt-to-equity ratio compares debt with shareholders’ equity.
Debt ratio is different because it compares debt with total assets.
So:
The equity ratio is the complementary financing view. If more assets are financed by debt, fewer are financed by equity, and vice versa.
That makes the two ratios natural companions in balance-sheet analysis.