Every business will have to deal with unearned revenue at some point or another. Small business owners must determine how best to manage and report unearned revenue within their accounting journals.
Unearned Revenue Defined
Unearned revenue refers to the money small businesses collect from customers for a or service that has not yet been provided. In simple terms, unearned revenue is the prepaid revenue from a customer to a business for goods or services that will be supplied in the future.
Criteria for Unearned Revenue
So, what type of account is unearned revenue, exactly?
In accounting, unearned revenue has its own account, which can be found on the business’s balance sheet. Funds in an unearned revenue account are classified as a current liability, in other words, a debt owed by a business to a customer.
Once a delivery has been completed and your business has finally provided prepaid goods or services to your customer, unearned revenue can be converted into revenue on your balance sheet.
So what Is Unearned Revenue and Why Is It Important?
Your business needs to record unearned revenue to account for the money it's received but not yet earned. Recording unearned revenue is important because your company can't account for it until you've provided your products or services to a paying customer.
It's important to rely on accounting software like QuickBooks Online to keep track of your unearned revenue so that you can generate accurate and timely financial statements each accounting period.
Unearned Revenue vs Deferred Revenue
Unearned revenue and deferred revenue are the same things, as are deferred income and unpaid income. These are are all various ways of referring to unearned revenue in accounting.
Examples of Unearned Revenue
Unearned revenue is a liability, so your business may record unearned revenue in its accounting books for a number of reasons:
- Magazine and journal subscriptions
- Subscription boxes and services
- Prepaid insurance
- Phone plans
- Rent
As an example of unearned revenue, let’s take a look at James. James enjoys surprises, so he decides to order a six-month subscription service to a popular mystery box company from which he will receive a themed box each month full of surprise items. James pays Beeker’s Mystery Boxes R40 per box for a six-month subscription totalling R240.
After James pays the store this amount, he has not yet received his monthly boxes, so Beeker’s Mystery Boxes would record R240 as unearned revenue in their records.
Every month, once James receives his mystery boxes, Beeker’s will remove R40 from unearned revenue and convert it to revenue instead, as James is now in possession of the goods he purchased.
At the end of the six months, all unearned revenue has converted into revenue, since all money received accounts for the six mystery boxes that have been paid for.

