Bad Debt Expense

Accounting
Updated Apr 2026

The cost recognized when accounts receivable are deemed uncollectible, matched to the period revenue was earned.

What is Bad Debt Expense?

Bad debt expense is the amount a company recognizes on its income statement when it estimates that a portion of its accounts receivable will not be collected. Under GAAP, the allowance method is preferred: companies estimate uncollectible amounts each period and record a contra-asset called the allowance for doubtful accounts to offset gross accounts receivable. The direct write-off method — recording the expense only when a specific account is deemed uncollectible — is simpler but violates the matching principle and is generally not accepted under GAAP for material amounts.

Example

Example

A retailer with $5 million in accounts receivable estimates that 2% will be uncollectible based on historical collection rates. It records a $100,000 bad debt expense and increases the allowance for doubtful accounts by the same amount, reducing net receivables to $4.9 million on the balance sheet. When a specific customer account of $15,000 is later confirmed as uncollectible, it is written off against the allowance — no additional expense is recorded at that time.

Source: FASB — ASC 310: Receivables