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FinanceJune 7, 2026Updated: July 7, 202616 min read

Cash vs Accrual Accounting (2026): Which Method Should Your Business Use?

Cash vs Accrual Accounting (2026): Which Method Should Your Business Use?

Cash accounting records income when money actually arrives and expenses when you actually pay them; accrual accounting records income when you earn it and expenses when you incur them. For 2026, a business may use the cash method if its average annual gross receipts over the prior three years are $32 million or less, the IRC Section 448(c) limit set by Rev. Proc. 2025-32, and under Section 471(c) that now includes businesses that carry inventory.

Key takeaways:

  • The 2026 cash accounting limit is $32 million in average annual gross receipts over the prior three years (IRC §448(c), up from $31 million in 2025)
  • Inventory no longer forces accrual: a small business taxpayer under the limit can use cash and account for inventory under IRC §471(c)
  • Most freelancers and small LLCs use cash; lenders and investors usually want accrual statements
  • C corporations (and partnerships with a C-corp partner) over the limit must use accrual; tax shelters can never use cash
  • Switching methods requires Form 3115 and a Section 481(a) adjustment

Cash vs accrual accounting compared side by side

The Two Methods in Plain English

An accounting method is just the set of rules you use to decide when a dollar shows up on your books. The IRS recognizes two main ones, and the difference comes down to timing.

Cash method. You record income when you actually receive the money and record an expense when you actually pay it. If a client pays you in January, it's January income, no matter when you did the work. If you pay a supplier in March, it's a March expense. Your books track the flow of cash in and out of your accounts. Most sole proprietors, freelancers, and small service businesses use the cash method because it's simple and mirrors their bank balance.

Accrual method. You record income when you earn it and record an expense when you incur it, regardless of when cash changes hands. Finish a project in December and invoice the client? That's December income, even if they pay in February. Receive a utility bill for December that you'll pay in January? That's a December expense. Accrual matches revenue to the period that actually produced it, which gives a truer picture of profitability over time.

Both methods are legitimate. Both are recognized by the IRS under Internal Revenue Code Section 446, which requires you to use a method that "clearly reflects income" and to apply it consistently year over year. The cash method is simpler. The accrual method is more accurate. Which one you should use depends on your size, your structure, and whether you carry inventory.

The Same Sale, Recorded Both Ways

Definitions only get you so far. Here's the same transaction recorded under each method so you can see the difference concretely.

Imagine you run a small design studio. On December 20, 2026, you finish a $6,000 branding project and email the invoice. The client pays on January 15, 2027. Separately, you receive a $1,000 software bill on December 28, 2026, which you pay on January 5, 2027.

Here's how each method books these two events:

Cash method (follows the money)Accrual method (follows the work)
2026 income$0 (no cash received yet)$6,000 (earned in Dec when work finished)
2026 expense$0 (bill not yet paid)$1,000 (incurred in Dec when bill arrived)
2026 profit$0$5,000
2027 income$6,000 (paid Jan 15)$0
2027 expense$1,000 (paid Jan 5)$0
2027 profit$5,000$0

Same business, same $5,000 of real profit, but a completely different picture of when it happened. Under cash, all the profit lands in 2027. Under accrual, it lands in 2026, the year the work was actually done.

This timing gap is the whole story. It's why a cash-basis business can look unprofitable in a busy month where it hasn't been paid yet, and flush in a slow month where old invoices finally clear. Accrual smooths that out by tying the numbers to the work. The trade-off shows up on your profit-and-loss statement, which reads very differently depending on which method feeds it.

Cash Method: Pros and Cons

The cash method is the default for most small businesses, and for good reason.

Advantages:

  • Simple to run. You record income when money lands and expenses when money leaves. No tracking of unpaid invoices or unpaid bills. Your books roughly match your bank statement.
  • Better cash-flow visibility. Because the books follow actual cash, you always see what you really have to spend. This matters most for businesses living close to the edge.
  • Tax timing control. You can sometimes defer income into next year (delay sending a December invoice) or accelerate deductions (pay a bill in December instead of January) to shift tax between years. The IRS limits how far you can push this, but the lever exists.

Disadvantages:

  • Distorted profitability. A month with big collections and no expenses looks wildly profitable, even if the work was done months ago. Cash accounting can mislead you about how the business is actually performing.
  • No view of what you're owed or what you owe. Accounts receivable and accounts payable don't appear in cash-basis profit. You have to track them separately to know your true position.
  • Harder to scale. Lenders, investors, and acquirers usually want accrual statements because they reflect real performance. Growing businesses often outgrow cash accounting.

The cash method shines for freelancers, consultants, and service businesses with simple, money-in-money-out operations and no inventory.

Accrual Method: Pros and Cons

The accrual method takes more effort but tells a truer story.

Advantages:

  • Accurate profitability. Revenue is matched to the period that earned it and costs to the period that produced them. This "matching principle" is the core of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), and it's why accrual is the standard for serious financial reporting.
  • Full picture of receivables and payables. Money owed to you and money you owe both show up on the books, so your balance sheet reflects your real financial position.
  • Required for many growth paths. Banks, the SEC, and most investors expect accrual statements. If you plan to raise money or sell, you'll likely need them.

Disadvantages:

  • More complex. You track invoices issued but unpaid, bills received but unpaid, prepaid expenses, and deferred revenue. This is real bookkeeping work.
  • Profit can outrun cash. You might owe tax on income you've earned but haven't collected. A big December invoice creates taxable income even if the cash arrives in March, which can squeeze businesses that aren't watching their bank balance.
  • Harder to do by hand. Accrual accounting practically requires software or a bookkeeper. The manual version is error-prone.

Accrual fits businesses that carry inventory, bill clients on terms, run projects across month or year boundaries, or plan to raise outside money.

The Cash Accounting Limit: The IRC Section 448(c) Gross Receipts Test

The cash accounting limit for 2026 is $32 million: if your average annual gross receipts over the prior three tax years are at or below that figure, you meet the gross receipts test of IRC Section 448(c) and qualify as a small business taxpayer allowed to use the cash method, even as a C corporation or a business that carries inventory.

The $32 million figure is set by Revenue Procedure 2025-32, the IRS's annual inflation-adjustment guidance. The threshold rose from $31 million for 2025 and $30 million for 2024. The base in the statute is $25 million, indexed for inflation each year and rounded to the nearest $1 million. One catch for growing companies: businesses under common ownership generally combine their gross receipts for the test under the aggregation rules of Section 448(c)(2), so you can't split into sibling entities to stay under the line.

Tax yearGross receipts thresholdSource
2024$30 millionRev. Proc. 2023-34
2025$31 millionRev. Proc. 2024-40
2026$32 millionRev. Proc. 2025-32

Here's how the rules break down by business type for 2026:

  • Sole proprietors, single-member LLCs, freelancers. You can use the cash method freely. The gross receipts test almost never binds at this size. This is the largest group of small businesses, and the cash method is the standard choice.
  • Partnerships and S corporations under $32 million. You qualify as a small business taxpayer and may use cash, accrual, or a hybrid, whichever clearly reflects income.
  • C corporations and partnerships with a C corp partner. Section 448 generally bars these from the cash method unless they meet the gross receipts test. Under $32 million in average annual gross receipts? Cash is allowed. Over it? You must use accrual.
  • Tax shelters. Barred from the cash method regardless of size.

If your business clears $32 million in average annual gross receipts, the choice is made for you: accrual is mandatory. Below that line, you get to decide based on what serves your business best.

Can You Use Cash Accounting With Inventory?

Yes. Since the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, a small business taxpayer (at or under the $32 million test for 2026) can carry inventory and still use the cash method. Historically, any business that produced, bought, or sold merchandise had to use accrual for purchases and sales; IRC Section 471(c) removed that requirement and gives qualifying businesses two ways to handle the inventory itself:

  • Non-incidental materials and supplies (NIMS). Inventory cost is deducted in the later of the year you use or consume the item (for a reseller, generally the year it sells) or the year you pay for it.
  • Book conformity. Follow the inventory method used in your applicable financial statement, or, if you don't have one, the method in your regular books and records.

That's a major simplification for small retailers, makers, and e-commerce sellers, who were previously locked into accrual.

What Section 471(c) does NOT do: it doesn't turn inventory into an instant write-off. Under both options, the cost of goods still generally waits until the items are sold (or paid for, whichever is later), so stocking up in December doesn't create a December deduction. And if your average gross receipts climb over the $32 million test, the exception disappears and standard inventory accounting under Section 471(a) returns.

Constructive Receipt: A Catch for Cash-Basis Filers

If you use the cash method, there's one rule that prevents gaming the system: constructive receipt.

Income is "constructively received" the moment it's available to you without restriction, even if you haven't physically deposited it. Per IRS Publication 538, income is constructively received when it's credited to your account or made available to you. You can't dodge tax by leaving a check in a drawer until January.

A worked example:

December 29, 2026: a client mails you a $4,000 check. December 31, 2026: the check sits in your mailbox, unopened. January 2, 2027: you open and deposit it. Tax treatment: the $4,000 is 2026 income, because the payment was available to you in 2026. Choosing not to retrieve or deposit it does not push the income to 2027.

The flip side: if a client genuinely hasn't paid yet, you don't recognize the income, because nothing is available to you. The rule only catches money you could have taken but chose to delay. It's worth understanding before you try to shift income between years for tax reasons, a topic we cover in the small business tax prep checklist.

How to Change Your Accounting Method

You don't get to flip between cash and accrual whenever it suits you. Once you adopt a method on your first tax return, the IRS treats it as locked in. To switch, you generally file Form 3115, Application for Change in Accounting Method.

Most cash-to-accrual and accrual-to-cash switches qualify for the IRS's automatic consent procedures, which means you don't need advance approval and pay no user fee. You attach the original Form 3115 to your timely filed return for the year of the change and mail a signed copy to the IRS in Ogden, Utah. Per the Instructions for Form 3115, filing under the automatic procedures grants consent as long as you comply.

The tricky part is the Section 481(a) adjustment. When you change methods, you have to account for the one-time difference so income isn't double-counted or skipped. Suppose you switch from cash to accrual and you're owed $20,000 in uncollected invoices that were never on your cash-basis books. That $20,000 becomes income under accrual, so you make a 481(a) adjustment to add it. A positive adjustment (more income) is generally spread over four years; a negative adjustment (less income) is taken in the year of change.

Section 481(a) adjustment example (cash to accrual, effective 2026)Amount
Accounts receivable not yet on the books+$20,000
Accounts payable not yet on the books-$8,000
Net 481(a) adjustment (increase to income)+$12,000
Treatment: positive adjustment spread over 4 years+$3,000 per year, 2026-2029

This is one area where a tax professional earns their fee. The form itself is detailed, and getting the 481(a) adjustment wrong creates problems that compound over years.

Which Method Should You Choose?

For most readers, the decision comes down to a few simple questions.

Your situationRecommended method
Freelancer or solo service business, no inventoryCash
Single-member LLC under $32MCash
Service business that bills clients on net-30 termsCash for tax, consider accrual for management
Product business carrying inventory, under $32MCash (now allowed) or accrual
Planning to raise venture or bank financingAccrual
Average annual gross receipts over $32MAccrual (required)
C corporation over $32MAccrual (required)

A common middle path: keep your tax books on the cash method for simplicity and IRS compliance, but run management reports on an accrual basis so you can see true profitability. Good accounting software can produce both views from the same underlying data, which means you don't have to choose between simple taxes and accurate insight. Our free profit and loss template works for either basis; just label which one you're using.

If you're not sure, default to cash while you're small and simple. It's easier, it matches your bank balance, and it keeps your tax filing straightforward. Switch to accrual when you start carrying meaningful inventory, billing on terms, or talking to lenders and investors, the points where the extra accuracy starts to pay for the extra effort. Understanding how your method feeds your chart of accounts makes either choice cleaner to maintain (our chart of accounts template is a ready starting point).

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Mixing the two methods by accident. Recording some income on cash and some on accrual without a deliberate, consistent hybrid policy muddies your books and can fail the "clearly reflects income" standard. Pick a method and apply it the same way every time.

Switching methods without Form 3115. Quietly changing how you book income from one year to the next is an unauthorized accounting method change. The IRS can undo it and reassess. If you want to switch, file the form.

Forgetting the 481(a) adjustment. Changing methods without accounting for the transition either double-counts income or drops it entirely. This is the single most common error in a method change.

Confusing cash-basis profit with cash flow. Even on the cash method, your profit number is not your spendable cash. Loan principal, owner draws, and equipment purchases all move cash without hitting profit. Read your cash flow statement alongside your P&L.

Assuming inventory forces accrual. It used to. For 2026, a small business taxpayer under the $32 million Section 448(c) test can carry inventory and still use the cash method, handling inventory under Section 471(c). Don't default to accrual out of habit if you qualify for the simpler option.

Keep Both Views Without the Manual Work: How Jupid Helps

The hardest part of any accounting method isn't choosing it, it's keeping the books accurate enough for the method to mean anything. Jupid is an AI accountant that lives in WhatsApp and iMessage. Connect your bank account and it pulls in every transaction and auto-categorizes it with 95.9% accuracy, so your cash-basis books stay current on their own. Ambiguous transactions get settled in a quick chat message, and Jupid learns how your business categorizes spending over time as it goes. Ask "what was my profit this quarter?" and the answer arrives in seconds, from numbers that already match your books. Try Jupid

Action Checklist

  • Confirm your average annual gross receipts over the last three years (the $32M test for 2026)
  • Identify your entity type: sole prop, LLC, partnership, S corp, or C corp
  • If under $32M, decide between cash (simpler) and accrual (more accurate)
  • If over $32M or a C corp over the threshold, use accrual (it's required)
  • Apply your chosen method consistently across every return
  • If switching methods, file Form 3115 and calculate the Section 481(a) adjustment
  • Watch constructive receipt: income is taxed when it's available, not when you deposit it
  • Consider running cash-basis taxes plus accrual-basis management reports

Sources


This guide is for general educational purposes and does not constitute tax, legal, or accounting advice. Accounting method rules, gross receipts thresholds, and the requirements for changing methods vary by business type and situation, and 2026 figures are based on the latest IRS guidance available at publication. Consult a qualified accountant or tax professional before choosing or changing your accounting method or filing your return.

Slava Akulov
Slava Akulov

CEO & Co-Founder

Fintech CEO with 10+ years building accounting and financial technology products. Previously co-founded and scaled an AI-powered accounting platform to $30M revenue and 100K+ business users, achieving 30,000 customers per accountant through automation — recognized by CNBC as a top fintech company. Holds a Master's in Management Information Systems. At Jupid, he leads the development of AI-native bookkeeping, tax, and compliance tools designed for freelancers and small business owners.

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