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Why profit is not cash — and why the difference can sink you

A business can show a healthy profit on paper and still run out of money in the bank. That gap has ended more companies than bad ideas ever have. Here's why it happens, and how to stay ahead of it.

Here's a scenario we see every year. A founder's profit-and-loss statement looks great — the business is clearly profitable. Then payday arrives and there isn't enough in the bank to cover salaries. They're confused, sometimes panicked: "We're making money. How can we be short on cash?" The answer is that profit and cash are two completely different things, and the difference between them is where a lot of otherwise-healthy businesses quietly get into trouble.

Understanding this one distinction changes how you run your business. This guide explains what profit and cash each actually measure, the handful of things that drive them apart, and a worked example that makes the gap obvious. If you'd rather have someone watch this for you, our accounting team tracks cash flow alongside profit every month.

What each one actually measures

Profit lives on your P&L statement; cash lives in your bank account. They move on different rules:

Profit vs cash
AspectProfit (P&L)Cash (bank)
What it measuresEarnings on paperActual money in and out
Counts a sale whenYou invoice itThe client pays
Counts a cost whenIt's incurredYou actually pay it
Loan repaymentOnly the interestThe full EMI
Buying equipmentSpread over years (depreciation)Full hit, upfront

The key word is timing. Profit records a sale the moment you raise the invoice; cash only moves when the client actually pays. That single difference is the source of most cash surprises.

The four things that create the gap

When your profit looks healthy but your cash doesn't, it's almost always one of these draining the bank:

  • Unpaid invoices (receivables). You've booked the sale and the profit, but the cash is sitting with your client. Fast growth makes this worse, not better.
  • Loan repayments. Only the interest portion hits your P&L; the principal repayment leaves your bank account in full but never appears as an expense.
  • Buying assets. A ₹5 lakh machine or laptop fleet is paid in full now, but shows up on your P&L slowly as depreciation — so cash drops far more than profit does.
  • Taxes and GST. GST you've collected isn't yours to keep, and advance tax falls due on fixed dates regardless of whether clients have paid you.

A worked example

Take a single month for a small services business. On paper it's profitable. In the bank, it's bleeding:

One month · same businessProfit vs cash, side by side
On paper (P&L)
Revenue (invoiced)
₹10,00,000
Cost of delivery
−₹6,00,000
Operating expenses
−₹2,00,000
Profit
+₹2,00,000
On paperProfit
In the bank (cash)
Collected from clients
₹4,00,000
Paid suppliers & salaries
−₹8,00,000
Loan EMI (principal + interest)
−₹1,00,000
GST paid
−₹50,000
Net cash
−₹5,50,000
In the bankShortfall

On paper this business made ₹2 lakh. In the bank it lost ₹5.5 lakh that month. Most of the gap is unpaid invoices — ₹6 lakh of revenue is booked as profit but hasn't arrived as cash. Run a few months like this and a profitable company is insolvent.

How to stay ahead of the gap

You manage this by watching cash deliberately, not assuming profit covers it:

  • Forecast cash, not just profit. A simple 13-week cash forecast shows shortfalls before they arrive, while you still have time to act.
  • Tighten collections. Invoice immediately, set clear payment terms, and chase overdue receivables — your receivable days are a cash metric, not an admin detail.
  • Time big outflows. Plan asset purchases, tax payments and loan EMIs around your collection cycle, not against it.
  • Keep a buffer. Hold enough cash to absorb a slow month — profit is no protection against a timing crunch.

All of this depends on one thing: books that are current and accurate. You can't forecast cash from a P&L that's three months out of date, which is why disciplined bookkeeping is the foundation under everything here.

Frequently asked questions

If I'm profitable, why should I worry about cash?

Because you pay salaries, suppliers and loans with cash, not with profit. A profitable business that can't cover its bills this month has a cash problem that profit won't solve in time. Many failures are profitable-on-paper businesses that simply ran out of cash.

What is a cash flow forecast?

It's a forward-looking schedule of the money you expect to come in and go out, week by week. Unlike a P&L, it's built on actual payment timing — so it shows you when your bank balance will dip, before it happens.

Why doesn't my loan repayment reduce my profit?

Only the interest part of a loan is an expense on your P&L. The principal repayment is the return of borrowed money, so it leaves your bank account but never appears as a cost — a classic reason cash falls faster than profit.

Can you manage cash flow for my business?

Yes. We keep your books current, track cash alongside profit, and build a rolling cash forecast so you always know what your bank balance will look like weeks ahead.

Never be surprised by your bank balance again. We'll set up cash-flow tracking and a rolling forecast alongside your monthly accounts, so you see shortfalls coming with time to act.

Book a free consultation →

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13-Week Cash Flow Forecast Template

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