
Every great band knows the difference between what's owed tonight - the venue hire, the sound engineer, the gear rental - and what's owed over the long haul, like the studio loan or that five-year equipment lease. In business, that same distinction has a formal name: current liabilities versus non-current liabilities. Get the two confused, and you're not just playing out of tune - you're potentially misrepresenting your entire financial position.
Whether you're a sole trader in Penrith, a creative studio in Western Sydney, or a growing business anywhere in Australia, understanding how these two categories work is fundamental to reading your balance sheet with confidence. Here's what you need to know.
A current liability is any financial obligation your business expects to settle within 12 months from the reporting date, or within your normal operating cycle - whichever is longer.
Under AASB 101 – Presentation of Financial Statements (Australia's equivalent of the international IAS 1 standard), a liability is classified as current when at least one of the following applies:
Think of current liabilities as the bills sitting in your inbox right now. They demand near-term attention and directly affect your day-to-day cash flow.
Accounts Payable (Trade Payables) Amounts owed to suppliers for goods or services received on credit - typically due within 30 to 90 days. For many retail and creative businesses, this is the largest current liability on the books.
Accrued Expenses Expenses incurred but not yet invoiced. Classic examples include employee wages earned in one month but paid in the next, or electricity consumed in December with the bill arriving in January.
Short-Term Debt and Bank Overdrafts Loans, notes payable, lines of credit, or overdrafts due within 12 months.
PAYG Withholding and Superannuation Tax withheld from employees and superannuation contributions - both obligations that must be remitted to the ATO and super funds within defined timeframes.
Deferred Revenue (Short-Term) Cash received in advance for goods or services you haven't yet delivered, where delivery is expected within 12 months. Common in subscription services, event bookings, and creative project deposits.
Current Portion of Long-Term Debt When a long-term loan has repayments falling due within the next 12 months, that portion must be reclassified as a current liability. For example, if a business holds a five-year loan with scheduled annual repayments of $50,000, the $50,000 instalment due in the coming year sits in the current liabilities column.
A non-current liability (also called a long-term liability) is a financial obligation your business is not expected to settle within the next 12 months. Under AASB 101, a liability is non-current when the entity has the substantive right, at the end of the reporting period, to defer settlement for at least 12 months beyond that date.
Non-current liabilities represent your longer-term financial commitments - the structural beams of your balance sheet. They don't demand immediate cash, but they carry significant weight when assessing your business's long-term solvency and capital structure.
Long-Term Loans and Borrowings Bank loans with repayment schedules extending beyond 12 months, commonly used to finance major assets or business expansion.
Bonds and Debentures Debt securities issued to investors with maturity dates beyond one year.
Long-Term Lease Obligations Under AASB 16, lease liabilities are recognised on the balance sheet for right-of-use arrangements. The non-current portion represents lease payments due beyond the next 12 months. For instance, a five-year office lease with annual payments would split into a current portion (the next year's payment) and a non-current portion (the remaining years).
Deferred Tax Liabilities (DTLs) Taxes payable in future periods arising from timing differences between accounting profit and taxable profit - such as different depreciation methods used for accounting versus tax purposes. Under AASB 101 paragraph 56, deferred tax liabilities are always classified as non-current.
Long Service Leave Provisions A distinctly Australian context - long service leave obligations accrued for employees who haven't yet become entitled are typically classified as non-current.
Long-Term Provisions Multi-year warranty obligations, environmental remediation costs, or asset retirement provisions expected to be settled beyond 12 months.
The core distinction is straightforward: timing. Current liabilities are due within 12 months; non-current liabilities are not. But the implications ripple out across your entire financial picture.
| Characteristic | Current Liabilities | Non-Current Liabilities |
|---|---|---|
| Settlement Timeframe | Within 12 months or operating cycle | Beyond 12 months |
| Balance Sheet Position | Listed first (above non-current) | Listed second (below current) |
| Impact on Key Ratios | Current ratio, quick ratio, working capital | Debt-to-equity, leverage ratios |
| Liquidity Concern | Immediate cash flow impact | Long-term financing impact |
| Classification Basis | Maturity date and settlement expectations | Substantive right to defer settlement 12+ months |
| Examples | Accounts payable, short-term loans, accrued expenses | Long-term debt, bonds, deferred tax, lease obligations |
| Covenant Impact | Immediate covenant tests affect classification | Only covenants due within 12 months affect classification |
Classification isn't just an accounting formality - it directly influences how lenders, investors, and stakeholders read your business's financial health.
Working Capital = Current Assets − Current Liabilities
A healthy working capital position means your business has sufficient short-term assets to meet its short-term obligations. Misclassifying a current liability as non-current (or vice versa) distorts this calculation and can paint a misleadingly rosy - or unnecessarily bleak - picture.
Two ratios that hinge on current liability classification are particularly telling:
Current Ratio = Current Assets ÷ Current Liabilities
A current ratio in the range of 1.5 to 2.0 is generally considered healthy for most businesses, though this varies by industry. A ratio of 2.41:1, for example, means your business has $2.41 in current assets for every $1.00 in current liabilities - a solid liquidity buffer.
Quick Ratio (Acid Test) = (Current Assets − Inventory) ÷ Current Liabilities
A more conservative measure that strips out inventory, giving a clearer picture of your ability to meet obligations with readily available assets. A benchmark of 0.8 to 1.0 or above is generally considered sound.
Non-current liabilities signal your business's long-term leverage and structural financial commitments. Key ratios informed by non-current liabilities include:
For creditors, current liabilities represent near-term repayment risk. For investors, both categories together reveal whether a business can sustain itself over the long haul.
Australian accounting standards were amended through AASB 2020-1 and AASB 2020-6, effective for reporting periods beginning on or after 1 January 2024. These changes introduced important clarifications that Australian businesses and their accountants need to understand.
Previously, entities could sometimes classify liabilities as non-current based on management's intention to refinance or pay early. Under the updated standards, classification is based on whether a substantive right to defer settlement exists at the end of the reporting period - not what management plans to do.
This means some loans previously treated as non-current may now correctly sit in the current column.
Only covenants that a company must comply with on or before the reporting date affect the liability's classification. Future covenants - those tested after the reporting date - do not affect classification at the balance sheet date. However, entities must now disclose information about such covenants so that readers understand the risk of liabilities potentially accelerating into the current category.
Where a liability includes a counterparty conversion option, classification of the host liability depends on whether the conversion option is recognised as equity or as a derivative liability. Only conversion options recognised as equity can be excluded from the classification assessment.
Getting the distinction right between a current liability and a non-current liability isn't just a compliance exercise - it's the difference between a financial statement that tells your business's true story and one that misleads.
Under AASB 101, both current and non-current liabilities must be clearly presented on your Statement of Financial Position (Balance Sheet) with current liabilities listed first, followed by non-current liabilities, each with their own subtotals. Detailed notes must accompany any significant liability categories.
For businesses in Penrith and across Greater Sydney - particularly those in creative industries navigating irregular cash flows, project-based billing, and variable revenue cycles - the current versus non-current distinction is a practical, operational concern, not just a theoretical one. It shapes your ability to negotiate with lenders, attract investors, manage supplier relationships, and plan for the future with clarity.
Understanding what is a current liability versus a non-current liability is, at its core, about understanding the rhythm of your business's financial obligations. Current liabilities are your urgent, short-tempo commitments - the ones that demand attention within the next 12 months. Non-current liabilities are your slow-burning, long-arrangement obligations that define your structural financial position over time.
Misreading either can throw your whole performance off key - affecting your liquidity ratios, lender relationships, covenant compliance, and strategic decision-making. For Australian businesses preparing financial statements under AASB standards, proper classification isn't optional - it's the foundation of a credible and useful set of accounts.
Ready to crank your finances up to 11? Let's chat about how we can amplify your profits and simplify your paperwork – contact us today.
The primary difference is timing. A current liability is a financial obligation expected to be settled within 12 months of the reporting date (or within the normal operating cycle if longer), while a non-current liability is not expected to be settled within that period. The classification is based on the substantive rights at the reporting date rather than management's intentions.
Yes. When the repayment date of a long-term obligation falls within the next 12 months from the reporting date, that portion must be reclassified as a current liability. Similarly, if a covenant breach occurs that gives a lender the right to demand early repayment, the affected loan may need to be reclassified as current.
Common current liabilities include accounts payable, accrued expenses (such as wages and utilities), PAYG withholding tax, superannuation contributions payable, GST payable, short-term bank loans or overdrafts, and the current portion of long-term debts.
The current ratio is calculated as Current Assets divided by Current Liabilities, so only current liabilities are used in its calculation. A higher balance of current liabilities reduces the current ratio, indicating tighter short-term liquidity, while non-current liabilities affect other long-term solvency ratios like the debt-to-equity ratio.
Deferred tax liabilities are always classified as non-current under Australian accounting standards (AASB 101, paragraph 56). They arise due to timing differences between how transactions are treated in accounting versus tax reporting and remain non-current regardless of when they are expected to reverse.
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