Core accounting identity showing that assets equal liabilities plus equity.
The balance-sheet equation is the core accounting identity behind double-entry reporting:
It explains why the balance sheet must balance. Every recorded asset is financed either by borrowing or by ownership capital.
This equation matters because it is not just a classroom formula. It is the structural logic of the entire balance sheet.
If the equation does not hold, the records are incomplete, misstated, or internally inconsistent.
When a company borrows cash:
assets increase because cash rises
liabilities increase because debt rises
When owners invest capital:
assets increase
equity increases
When the company earns profit and retains it:
assets may increase
equity increases through retained earnings
The equation links directly to statement interpretation:
assets show economic resources
liabilities show obligations
equity shows the residual claim after liabilities
That is why the equation sits underneath leverage analysis, solvency analysis, and capital-structure reading.
Balance Sheet: The statement built directly on this identity.
Assets: One side of the equation.
Liabilities: A financing claim against assets.
Equity: The residual ownership claim.