Equity, Borrowings, Interest, and Dividends
Learning objectives
- Record common equity transactions (share issues and movements in reserves) using double-entry bookkeeping.
- Account for borrowings and related interest using accruals and prepayments, ensuring finance costs are recognised in the correct period.
- Record dividends correctly, separating distributions to owners from expenses, and distinguishing dividends authorised by the reporting date from dividends proposed afterwards.
- Prepare and interpret a simple statement of changes in equity, explaining the main movements in each equity component.
- Avoid common classification errors: equity vs liabilities, dividends vs expenses, and interest paid vs interest accrued.
Overview & key concepts
Transactions involving equity, borrowings, interest, and dividends affect several parts of the financial statements:
- Statement of financial position: shows equity balances, borrowings outstanding, and any unpaid interest or authorised-but-unpaid dividends.
- Statement of profit or loss: includesfinance costs(interest) as an expense of the period.
- Statement of changes in equity: explains how equity has moved from opening to closing balances through profit and owner-related transactions.
This topic is often taught in two layers:
- Bookkeeping layer: record the basic journals accurately and keep the accounting equation in balance.
- Financial reporting layer: apply classification, measurement, and disclosure rules (for example, current/non-current presentation and more advanced interest measurement).
The accounting equation
A useful way to sense-check entries is:
Assets = Liabilities + Equity
- Borrowings increaseliabilities.
- Share issues increaseequity.
- Interest increasesfinance costs(reducing profit) and may create aliabilityif unpaid.
- Dividends reduceequity(through retained earnings) and are not expenses.
Quick debit/credit reminders
- Assets: increase withdebits, decrease with credits
- Liabilities: increase withcredits, decrease with debits
- Equity: increase withcredits, decrease with debits
- Income: increase withcredits
- Expenses: increase withdebits
Core theory and frameworks
Equity
Equity represents the owners’ interest in the entity’s net assets (assets after settling obligations). Typical components include:
- Share capital: the par/nominal value of shares issued.
- Share premium (additional paid-in capital): the amount received above nominal value on issue.
- Retained earnings: accumulated profits kept in the business, after distributions to owners.
Recording a share issue
When shares are issued for cash:
- DebitBank(asset increases)
- CreditShare capital(nominal amount)
- CreditShare premium(excess over nominal)
Example: 10,000 £1 shares issued at £1.50
- Cash received = £15,000
- Share capital = £10,000
- Share premium = £5,000
Journal
- Dr Bank £15,000
- Cr Share capital £10,000
- Cr Share premium £5,000
Accounting equation check: assets rise by £15,000; equity rises by £15,000.
Borrowings
Borrowings are obligations to repay cash (often with interest).
Recording a loan on receipt
- DebitBank
- CreditBorrowings
Journal (loan received)
- Dr Bank
- Cr Borrowings
Current vs non-current: classification depends on terms
Borrowings are classified as current or non-current based on:
- thecontractual repayment date, and
- whether the entity has theright at the reporting dateto defer settlement beyond 12 months.
If repayment terms are not provided, the classification cannot be concluded from the information given. In assessment questions, any assumption (for example, “repayable after 12 months”) should be stated clearly and applied consistently.
Accrued interest is typically presented separately as a current liability.
Interest: accruals and prepayments
Interest is a finance cost recognised in the period in which it is incurred, not necessarily when it is paid.
Basic interest calculation
- Interest = Principal × annual rate × time fraction
Accrued interest (unpaid at the reporting date)
If interest relates to the current period but is unpaid at year-end:
- DrFinance costs
- CrInterest payable
Prepaid interest (paid in advance)
If interest is paid before the period it relates to, part of the payment is an asset (a prepayment).
There are two common posting approaches.
Approach 1 (simple in practice questions): expense first, then adjust
On payment
- Dr Finance costs
- Cr Bank
At period end: transfer the future portion to an asset
- Dr Prepaid interest
- Cr Finance costs
Approach 2 (cleaner): recognise the asset first, then release
On payment
- Dr Prepaid interest
- Cr Bank
Over time / at period end: charge the portion relating to the current period
- Dr Finance costs
- Cr Prepaid interest
Illustration (same numbers, either approach works)
£1,200 is paid covering 3 months, and 2 months relate to the next accounting period.
Prepaid amount = £1,200 × 2/3 = £800
Current period finance cost = £1,200 × 1/3 = £400
Dividends
Dividends are distributions to owners. They are not expenses and do not reduce profit in the statement of profit or loss.
When does a dividend become a liability?
A dividend becomes a liability only when it has been properly authorised in line with the entity’s governing rules and the entity no longer has a practical ability to withdraw it. From that point, if the dividend is unpaid at the reporting date, it is presented as dividends payable (normally current).
If management proposes or announces a dividend after the reporting date, it does not create a liability at the reporting date. It is typically treated as an event after the reporting date and explained in the notes where disclosure is required.
Journals
Authorised by the reporting date but unpaid
- Dr Retained earnings (equity distribution)
- Cr Dividends payable
Paid
- Dr Dividends payable
- Cr Bank
Paid without any year-end payable (for example, an interim dividend paid during the year)
- Dr Retained earnings (equity distribution)
- Cr Bank
Statement of changes in equity
A simple statement of changes in equity explains movements in:
- Share capital
- Share premium
- Retained earnings
- Total equity
Typical drivers of movement:
- Share issues (increase share capital/share premium)
- Profit for the year (increases retained earnings)
- Dividends (decrease retained earnings)
A key check: closing total equity must agree to total equity in the statement of financial position.
Scope note: what changes in more advanced reporting questions?
In straightforward bookkeeping questions, interest is often calculated using the simple time-apportionment method shown above. In more advanced reporting, borrowings may be measured at amortised cost using an effective interest rate and may include transaction costs within the calculation of finance costs. In limited circumstances, borrowing costs may also be added to the cost of a qualifying asset rather than expensed immediately. Where these issues matter, the question will normally provide clear guidance on the required treatment.
Worked example
Narrative scenario
A company, ABC Ltd, operates in the UK.
Timeline (year ended 31 December 20X5)
- 1 Jan: share issue for cash
- 1 Apr: loan received; interest runs from this date
- Quarterly interest: Apr–Jun, Jul–Sep, Oct–Dec
- 30 Sep: interim dividend paid
- 31 Dec: final quarter interest unpaid; year-end accrual needed
Transactions:
- 1 January 20X5: issued50,000 ordinary sharesat£1.40each; cash received£70,000. Nominal value is£1 per share.
- 1 April 20X5: received a£120,000bank loan at8% per annum. Interest ispayable quarterly.
- Profitbefore interestfor the year ended 31 December 20X5 was£90,000.
- An interim dividend of£10,000waspaidon30 September 20X5.
- Interest for thelast quarterwasunpaid at year-end.
Required
- Compute share capital and share premium from the share issue.
- Record the loan receipt and interest entries (including the year-end accrual).
- Record the interim dividend payment.
- Prepare extracts of the statement of profit or loss and statement of financial position at year-end.
- Prepare a simple statement of changes in equity.
Solution
1) Share issue (1 January 20X5)
Cash received
50,000 shares × £1.40 = £70,000
Share capital (nominal value)
50,000 shares × £1.00 = £50,000
Share premium
£70,000 − £50,000 = £20,000
Journal
- Dr Bank£70,000
- Cr Share capital£50,000
- Cr Share premium£20,000
Accounting equation impact: Assets +70,000; Equity +70,000.
2) Loan receipt (1 April 20X5)
Journal
- Dr Bank£120,000
- Cr Borrowings£120,000
Accounting equation impact: Assets +120,000; Liabilities +120,000.
3) Interest for the year (including unpaid final quarter)
Annual interest
£120,000 × 8% = £9,600
Loan period in the year: 1 April to 31 December = 9 months
Interest for 9 months
£9,600 × 9/12 = £7,200
Quarterly interest amount:
£120,000 × 8% × 3/12 = £2,400 per quarter
Interest paid during the year: two quarters (Apr–Jun and Jul–Sep)
2 × £2,400 = £4,800
Interest unpaid at year-end: last quarter (Oct–Dec)
£2,400
Journals
a) On payment (two quarterly payments during the year)
- Dr Finance costs£4,800
- Cr Bank£4,800
b) Year-end accrual (31 December 20X5)
- Dr Finance costs£2,400
- Cr Interest payable£2,400
Total finance costs for the year = £4,800 + £2,400 = £7,200
4) Interim dividend paid (30 September 20X5)
Because the dividend is paid during the year, it reduces retained earnings directly and leaves no dividend payable at year-end.
Journal
- Dr Retained earnings (equity distribution)£10,000
- Cr Bank£10,000
5) Extracts of financial statements at 31 December 20X5
Statement of profit or loss (extract)
- Profit before interest:£90,000
- Finance costs:(£7,200)
- Profit for the year:£82,800
Statement of financial position (extract)
Equity
- Share capital:£50,000
- Share premium:£20,000
- Retained earnings:£72,800
- Profit for the year £82,800 less dividend paid £10,000
Total equity: £142,800
Liabilities
- Borrowings:£120,000
- Interest payable:£2,400
(Loan current/non-current classification depends on repayment terms, which are not provided.)
6) Statement of changes in equity (simple)
| Share capital (£) | Share premium (£) | Retained earnings (£) | Total equity (£) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Opening balance (1 Jan 20X5) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Issue of shares | 50,000 | 20,000 | 0 | 70,000 |
| Profit for the year | 0 | 0 | 82,800 | 82,800 |
| Dividend paid | 0 | 0 | (10,000) | (10,000) |
| Closing balance (31 Dec 20X5) | 50,000 | 20,000 | 72,800 | 142,800 |
Common pitfalls and misunderstandings
- Treating dividends as an expense: dividends are owner distributions; they reduce retained earnings and do not appear in profit or loss.
- Recognising a dividend liability too early: a liability exists only once the dividend is properly authorised and cannot realistically be withdrawn.
- Omitting interest accruals: finance costs must include interest incurred up to year-end even if unpaid; otherwise liabilities and expenses are understated.
- Posting interest paid incorrectly: interest paid is a finance cost unless it clearly relates to a future period (prepayment).
- Mixing up share capital and share premium: share capital is the nominal portion; the excess goes to share premium.
- Errors in the statement of changes in equity: profit affects retained earnings, not share capital or share premium.
- Assuming current/non-current without terms: classification depends on contractual maturity and rights to defer settlement at the reporting date; state assumptions if needed.
Summary and further reading
Equity transactions (such as issuing shares) increase equity and are explained in the statement of changes in equity. Borrowings increase liabilities, while interest is recognised as a finance cost in the period incurred and may create an interest payable liability if unpaid at the reporting date. Dividends are not expenses; they are distributions to owners and reduce retained earnings, with a liability recognised only once properly authorised and unavoidable. A clear statement of changes in equity provides a bridge from opening to closing equity and should reconcile to the equity section of the statement of financial position.
FAQ
How are dividends treated in the financial statements?
Dividends are distributions to owners and reduce retained earnings. They are not reported as expenses in profit or loss. A dividend is recognised as a liability only once it has been properly authorised and cannot realistically be withdrawn. If unpaid at the reporting date, it is shown as dividends payable (normally current). If proposed after the reporting date, it is not recognised as a liability at year-end and is usually disclosed where required.
What is the difference between share capital and share premium?
Share capital records the nominal (par) value of shares issued. Share premium records the additional amount received above nominal value when shares are issued at a higher price. Both are equity balances.
How is interest on borrowings accounted for?
Interest is recognised as a finance cost as time passes, regardless of when it is paid. Any unpaid interest at the reporting date is recorded as interest payable (a liability). If interest is paid in advance, the portion relating to a future period is recognised as a prepayment (an asset).
What is the purpose of the statement of changes in equity?
It explains how each equity balance changes during the period. It separates performance-related movements (profit) from owner-related movements (share issues and dividends), and it reconciles to the equity balances shown in the statement of financial position.
Why does the timing of dividend authorisation matter?
Because a liability exists only when the dividend has been properly authorised and the entity can no longer realistically avoid paying it. Before that point, there is no present obligation to recognise at the reporting date.
Glossary
Equity
Owners’ interest in the entity’s net assets. It includes contributed funds (share capital and share premium), accumulated results (retained earnings), and any other reserves.
Share capital
The nominal (par) value of shares issued.
Share premium
The amount received on issue of shares above their nominal value, recorded as a separate equity balance.
Retained earnings
Accumulated profits kept in the business after distributions to owners.
Dividend
A distribution of profits to owners. It reduces retained earnings and is not an expense. A dividend payable is recognised only once the distribution is properly authorised and unavoidable.
Borrowings
Interest-bearing obligations such as bank loans or loan notes, recognised as liabilities.
Finance costs
The cost of funding through borrowings, typically interest and similar charges recognised in profit or loss.
Interest payable
A liability for interest incurred up to the reporting date that has not yet been paid.
Prepaid interest
An asset representing interest paid that relates to a future accounting period.
Statement of changes in equity
A financial statement showing movements in each equity component from the start to the end of the period, including profit and owner transactions.
Test your knowledge
Practice questions specifically for this topic.
Written by
AccountingBody Editorial Team