In AP Business, a cash inflow is any money coming into a business that increases its cash balance during a reporting period, such as customer payments, interest or dividends earned, or proceeds from selling an asset (Topic 3.8).
A cash inflow is money moving into a business. On the cash flow statement, inflows are the entries that push your cash balance up over a reporting period (EK 3.8.A.3). The classic examples are payments from customers, interest or dividends earned on investments, and proceeds from selling off an asset like equipment or property.
Think of the cash flow statement as a bank account log for the whole business. Inflows are the deposits, outflows are the withdrawals, and the difference is whether your cash pile grew or shrank (EK 3.8.A.1). Inflows matter because a business needs actual cash on hand to cover payroll, rent, loan payments, and surprise expenses (EK 3.8.A.2). Profit on paper is nice, but you can't pay your employees with profit. You pay them with cash that actually came in.
Cash inflow lives in Unit 3, Topic 3.8 (The Cash Flow Statement). It directly supports learning objective AP Business 3.8.A, where you determine and describe the components of a cash flow statement, and it connects to AP Business 3.8.B, which is about how stakeholders read that statement. The big takeaway the CED hammers home: a business can show positive net income and still go bankrupt if its cash inflows don't actually arrive on time (EK 3.8.B.2). That gap between "profitable" and "has cash" is exactly what the cash flow statement exposes, and inflows are one half of the story.
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view galleryCash Outflow (Unit 3)
Inflows and outflows are the two sides of the same ledger. Inflows raise your cash balance, outflows lower it, and subtracting one from the other tells you whether the business gained or burned cash this period.
Cash Flow Statement (Unit 3)
Cash inflow is one of the building blocks of this statement. The whole document exists to track inflows and outflows so you can see how the cash balance changed over a reporting period.
Operating, Investing, and Financing Activities (Unit 3)
Every cash inflow gets sorted into one of these three buckets. Customer payments are operating, selling an asset is investing, and taking out a loan or issuing stock is financing, so the same idea of money coming in shows up in all three sections.
Expect multiple-choice questions that ask you to spot which transaction counts as a cash inflow. Stems look like "Which of the following is an example of a cash inflow for a retail business?" and your job is to pick the option where money comes into the business, like a customer paying for goods or the business earning dividend income. Another common move gives you a scenario where a company receives dividend income and takes out a bank loan, then asks which term describes those transactions (answer: cash inflows). You may also see questions asking which financial statement a business should review to check whether it has enough cash to cover salaries, supplier invoices, and loan payments, which points you to the cash flow statement. No released FRQ has used this term verbatim, but understanding inflows is essential for any prompt about whether a business can meet its obligations.
A cash inflow is money coming IN that raises your cash balance (customer payments, interest earned, asset sales). A cash outflow is money going OUT that lowers it (paying rent, payroll, suppliers, or loans). If you ever mix them up, ask one question: did the business receive cash or spend it?
A cash inflow is any money coming into a business that increases its cash balance during a reporting period.
Common inflows are customer payments, interest or dividends earned on investments, and proceeds from selling a business asset.
Inflows appear on the cash flow statement alongside outflows, and the difference shows whether cash grew or shrank.
A business can be profitable on paper and still fail if cash inflows don't actually arrive in time to pay the bills.
Inflows get sorted into operating, investing, or financing activities depending on where the money came from.
A cash inflow is money flowing into a business that increases its cash balance during a reporting period. Typical examples include payments from customers, interest or dividends earned, and proceeds from selling an asset (EK 3.8.A.3).
Inflows are money coming in that raises the cash balance, like customer payments or interest earned. Outflows are money going out that lowers it, like payroll, rent, or loan repayments. The simplest test is whether the business received cash or spent it.
No. Profit (net income) is revenue minus expenses on the income statement, while cash inflow is actual cash that arrives. A business can report positive net income and still run out of cash if customers haven't paid yet, which is exactly the risk Topic 3.8 warns about (EK 3.8.B.2).
Cash from customers buying products, interest or dividends earned on the company's investments, and money received from selling a piece of equipment or property all count as inflows for a retailer.
Inflows are recorded in one of three sections depending on their source: operating activities (customer payments), investing activities (selling assets), or financing activities (taking out a loan or issuing stock).
Connect this key term to the AP exam workflow: review the course, practice questions, and check related study tools.