Dividends Payable (2024)

Step-by-Step Guide to Understanding Dividends Payable in Accounting

Last Updated December 24, 2023

What are Dividends Payable?

Dividends Payable is classified as a current liability on the balance sheet, since the expense represents declared payments to shareholders that are generally fulfilled within one year.

Dividends Payable (1)

What is the Definition of Dividends Payable?

Once a proposed cash dividend is approved and declared by the board of directors, a corporation can distribute dividends to its shareholders.

The announced dividend, despite the cash still being in the possession of the company at the time of the announcement, creates a current liability line item on the balance sheet called “Dividends Payable”.

The treatment as a current liability is because these items represent a board-approved future outflow of cash, i.e. a future payment to shareholders. The carrying value of the account is set equal to the total dividend amount declared to shareholders.

However, note that a corporation is under no obligation to proceed with the dividend distribution if it decides otherwise is in the best interests of the shareholders, i.e. dividend payments are discretionary decisions, not a binding legal obligation like interest expense on debt.

What Type of Account is Dividends Payable (Debit or Credit)?

Cash dividends are paid out of a company’s retained earnings, the accumulated profits that are kept rather than distributed to shareholders.

The correct journal entry post-declaration would thus be a debit to the retained earnings account and a credit of an equal amount to the dividends payable account.

The important distinction here is that the actual cash outflow does not occur until the actual payment date.

On the initial date when a dividend to shareholders is formally declared, the company’s retained earnings account is debited for the dividend amount while the dividends payable account is credited by the same amount.

  • Retained Earnings → Debited [Dr.]
  • Dividends Payable → Credited [Cr.]

Therefore, the dividends payable account – a current liability line item on the balance sheet – is recorded as a credit on the date of approval by the board of directors.

Later, on the date when the previously declared dividend is actually distributed in cash to shareholders, the payables account would be debited whereas the cash account is credited.

  • Dividends Payable → Debited [Dr.]
  • Cash → Credited [Cr.]

What are Journal Entry Examples of Dividends Payable?

Suppose a corporation currently has 100,000 common shares outstanding with a par value of $10.

If the corporation’s board of directors declared a cash dividend of $0.50 per common share on the $10 par value, the dividend amounts to $50,000.

  • Dividend = $0.50 × 100,000 = $50,000

The journal entry on the date of declaration is the following:

General LedgerDebit [Dr.]Credit [Cr.]
Retained Earnings$50,000
Dividends Payable$50,000

As shown in the general ledger above, the retained earnings account is debited by $50,000 while the payables account is credited $50,000.

Once the previously declared cash dividends are distributed, the following entries are made on the date of payment.

General LedgerDebit [Dr.]Credit [Cr.]
Dividends Payable

$50,000

Cash$50,000

Since the cash dividends were distributed, the corporation must debit the dividends payable account by $50,000, with the corresponding entry consisting of the $50,000 credit to the cash account.

Dividends Payable (2)

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Prem

September 8, 2022 7:31 am

Exlent explain

2

Reply

Eleonore

January 7, 2024 8:08 am

This is exactly the information I was looking for. So helpful. In my case it was decided to offset the dividend payable against an open receivable invoice. In this case I will credit the A/R instead of Cash. Right? Thank you very much!

Reply

Brad Barlow

January 8, 2024 12:24 pm

Reply toEleonore

Hi, Eleonore, Glad it was helpful! So the open receivable was given to the shareholder for their dividend instead of cash? If that is the case, then yes, that would be the entry. But if the receivable was collected and then paid as a dividend, then cash would be adjustedRead more »

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Scott

December 23, 2023 8:24 am

Very good explanation just a little confused about the last part, Crediting the Cash account? Does this record the money leaving the business? I dont have a Cash account in my Chart of Accounts so do I just need to create one and is this basically cash removed from theRead more »

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Brad Barlow

January 3, 2024 3:32 pm

Reply toScott

Hi, Scott,

You should definitely have cash as one of your accounts, and yes, it records cash leaving the business (being credited).

BB

Reply

Scott Whittaker

January 4, 2024 4:13 pm

Reply toBrad Barlow

Hi, thank you for the reply. I have cash accounts ie the bank accounts are labelled “Cash on Hand” but I dont think you mean those as I wouldn’t credit those like this. Currently I have money in Dividends Payable which is a Liability account. I need to Debit thatRead more »

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Brad Barlow

January 5, 2024 1:50 pm

Reply toScott Whittaker

Hi, Scott,

No, I do mean credit those cash accounts. You would pay the dividend in cash, and when you did, the dividend payable liability would be reduced.

BB

Reply

Scott Whittaker

January 5, 2024 5:33 pm

Reply toBrad Barlow

Thats the company bank account though so not where I am putting/crediting the dividend? So if I debit the Dividends Payable account say by £1000 and credit the Cash at Bank account will that not show £1000 more money in the company bank account than there actually is or amRead more »

Reply

Brad Barlow

January 8, 2024 4:47 pm

Reply toScott Whittaker

Hi, Scott, You seem to be confusing cash as an account at a company with how you think about your own checking account at a bank. Yes, you use a debit card and that reduces the money in your checking account, but that is because from the bank’s perspective, itRead more »

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