Home
  /  
Learning Center
  /  
How to calculate retained earnings: Formula & example

How to calculate retained earnings: Formula & example

Understanding how to calculate retained earnings is essential for business owners and investors alike, as it provides valuable insight into a company's financial health and growth potential.
This post will guide you through the process of calculating your company's retained earnings step by step to help you make informed decisions regarding your business's financial performance.

Retained earnings formula

Since retained earnings is a company's accumulated net income that's kept after paying out dividends to shareholders, you can find retained earnings with three factors:

  • Beginning period retained earnings
  • Net income (profit or loss)
  • Dividends paid

Given that, the retained earnings equation is as follows:

Retained earnings equation
Ending retained earnings = Beginning retained earnings + Net income – Dividends paid

It's easy to understand the math if you think about what retained earnings actually are—the earnings that a company has kept (retained) over time instead of paying it out to shareholders.

So, you start with what you already had—the retained earnings the last time you calculated it. Then, you add any new net income since then, and subtract any dividends you've paid out since then.

What's left is your new retained earnings.

The formal structure is presented below, but that's the gist of it. You're just figuring out how much you've earned that you haven't paid out to your shareholders as dividend payments.

How to calculate retained earnings

Here's how to calculate retained earnings step by step:

  1. Start with the beginning balance of your retained earnings
  2. Add your net income for the most recent reporting period
  3. Subtract any dividends paid out of that net income

It's that simple. Add your net income and subtract dividends paid to get the end balance of your retained earnings.

Example of retained earnings calculation

Let's look at an example to see how the retained earnings formula works.

Company XYZ has reported figures for a three-month period ending February 28, 2024 (figures are in thousands of dollars). While calculating retained earnings of this company, assume the beginning retained earnings balance is $0.

example statement of retained earnings

So plug the numbers from the example into the retained earnings formula:

Beginning period retained earnings + Net income (profit or loss) – Dividends paid

$0 + $35 – $15 = $20

Company XYZ's retained earnings are $20.

Nothing you'd write home about, but hey, it's just an example. If you multiplied each of those numbers by 1 million, it would work the same way.

$0 + $35 million – $15 million = $20 million

Now your company's balance sheet is looking pretty great—especially that shareholders equity section. It might be time to turn more of your company's net income into some dividend payouts!

Statement of retained earnings template

A statement of retained earnings template generally includes the following sections:

  1. Beginning Retained Earnings
  2. Net Income (or Loss)
  3. Cash Dividends
  4. Stock Dividends
  5. Ending Retained Earnings

In other words, it follows the retained earnings formula.

  1. The retained earnings you started with
  2. Your net income or loss since the last time you calculated retained earnings
  3. Any dividends you paid out
  4. Your new retained earnings total

Retention ratio

Retained earnings can also be reported as a percentage of total earnings, known as a retention ratio.

In other words, it tells you what percent of your net income you're keeping, rather than paying it out to shareholders.

Retained earnings retention ratio formula

Here's how you calculate the retention ratio:

Retention ratio
Retained Earnings / Net Income

Dividend payout ratio

The dividend payout ratio is the opposite of the retention ratio.

While the retention ratio looks at the percentage of net income you're keeping, the dividend payout ratio looks at the percentage of net income you're paying out to shareholders.

You can find the dividend payout ratio by subtracting the retention ratio percentage from 100%. For example, if your retention ratio is 25%, then your dividend payout ratio is 75%. You're keeping 25% of your net income and paying out the other 75%.

Dividend payout ratio formula

Mathematicians tend to think of 100% as 1, so they write percentages as decimals.

  • 25% would be 0.25
  • 75% would be 0.75

If you look at it this way, you can find the dividend payout ratio by subtracting the retention ratio (as a decimal) from 1. Either way, you'll get the same answer.

Dividend payout ratio
Dividend Payout Ration= 1- Retention Ratio

How to interpret retained earnings calculations

Do you want high or low retained earnings? That depends on your company's circumstances.

If dividends are rising at a proportionally larger amount each year compared to net income, the retention ratio will decrease. That's an indicator the business is focusing less on growth—because more money is going to shareholders and less is being reinvested.

Startups and smaller, growth-focused companies tend to have high retention ratios. Large companies that are already profitable and comfortable paying dividends will have a lower ratio.

Distributing dividends reduces your retained earnings, whether you pay those dividends in cash or stock. When a company pays dividends in cash, it results in a net reduction in retained earnings.

Can you have negative retained earnings?

Yes, you can. Negative retained earnings may be a reflection of a company's financial performance. It often means that revenue is too low and expenses are too high.

Remember, net income is part of the retained earnings calculation. When that number is negative for a given accounting period, it lowers your company's retained earnings balance—even if that means your ending retained earnings balance is in the red.

However, some companies with long-standing profitability may occasionally report negative retained earnings. This just means the company decided to pay out more than it reported in profits.

So the retained earnings calculation is one indicator of a business's financial health, but it isn't the whole story.

Retained earnings are reported on the balance sheet under shareholders' equity because the retained earnings account represents exactly that—the retained earnings balance that essentially belongs to the company's owners.

Those owners might be stockholders, or they could be private shareholders. It could even be just one or two people for a small, private startup.

As companies grow, their shareholders' equity tends to be split among more and more people or entities—from the venture capital companies that invest in them to, eventually, public stockholders.

Notable considerations about retained earnings

Building up a retained earnings account may sound appealing, but you should keep in mind a few key points about the nature of retained earnings:

  • Retained earnings might not provide meaningful insight to investors trying to determine a company's health during a quarter or a year, as they need to compare figures over several years to determine a company's performance.
  • Fluctuating profits make retained earnings an uncertain source for investors to gauge a company's performance.
  • Some companies underestimate the opportunity cost of building up retained earnings, enabling them to invest in companies or opportunities.

Use automated tracking to process expenses with ease

Retained earnings provide you with important insight into your company's financial strength, but several financial statements need to be prepared to calculate retained earnings.

One of the most important is your company's income statement—and you'll need to process your expenses to put this statement together.

The easiest way to see your company's financial position is to track your operational activities in one place with an expense management platform.

BILL Spend & Expense simplifies the invoice-capturing process by doing all the hard work for you—and it even syncs with most popular business accounting systems. All you have to do is review and approve.

Learn how Bill's expense management software can help you organize your financial data and save time by signing up today or requesting a demo.

BILL and its affiliates do not provide tax, legal or accounting advice. This material has been prepared for informational purposes only, and is not intended to provide, and should not be relied on, for tax, legal or accounting advice. You should consult your own tax, legal and accounting advisors before engaging in any transaction. BILL assumes no responsibility for any inaccuracies or inconsistencies in the content. While we have made every attempt to ensure that the information contained in this site has been obtained from reliable sources, BILL is not responsible for any errors or omissions, or for the results obtained from the use of this information. All information in this site is provided “as is”, with no guarantee of completeness, accuracy, timeliness or of the results obtained from the use of this information, and without warranty of any kind, express or implied. In no event shall BILL, its affiliates or parent company, or the directors, officers, agents or employees thereof, be liable to you or anyone else for any decision made or action taken in reliance on the information in this site or for any consequential, special or similar damages, even if advised of the possibility of such damages. Certain links in this site connect to other websites maintained by third parties over whom BILL has no control. BILL makes no representations as to the accuracy or any other aspect of information contained in other websites.