Statement of Cash Flows: Direct Method Explained With Full Conversion Example
Most students learn the indirect method of presenting operating cash flows — start with net income and adjust for non-cash items and working capital changes. But the FASB actually prefers the direct method, which shows the actual gross cash inflows and outflows from operating activities. Understanding both, knowing how to convert between them, and recognising when each is used are skills tested in intermediate accounting, advanced financial analysis, and the FAR section of the CPA exam.
Two Methods, Same Ending Balance
Both the direct method and the indirect method produce exactly the same total net cash provided by (or used in) operating activities. The difference is presentation only: the indirect method reconciles net income to operating cash flow by adjusting for non-cash items and working capital changes. The direct method presents the gross cash collections and payments directly, without starting from net income.
The financing and investing sections of the cash flow statement are identical under both methods — only the operating section differs. See the foundational guide on the indirect method cash flow statement for the complete framework of the full statement.
Indirect Method: The Most Common Approach
Despite the FASB's preference for the direct method, over 95% of public companies use the indirect method in practice — primarily because it is easier to prepare (the information flows directly from the income statement and comparative balance sheets already prepared) and because GAAP does not require the direct method. The indirect method's operating section looks like this:
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Net income | $185,000 |
| Add: Depreciation and amortisation | $42,000 |
| Add: Increase in accounts payable | $18,000 |
| Less: Increase in accounts receivable | ($31,000) |
| Less: Increase in inventory | ($22,000) |
| Add: Decrease in prepaid expenses | $5,000 |
| Net cash from operating activities | $197,000 |
Direct Method: What the FASB Prefers
The direct method shows the actual cash flows — cash collected from customers, cash paid to suppliers, cash paid to employees, cash paid for interest and taxes. When companies use the direct method, GAAP also requires a supplemental schedule reconciling net income to operating cash flows (essentially the indirect method presented as a footnote). The direct method operating section presents major classes of gross cash receipts and payments:
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Cash collected from customers | $843,000 |
| Cash paid to suppliers | ($512,000) |
| Cash paid to employees | ($98,000) |
| Cash paid for interest | ($22,000) |
| Cash paid for income taxes | ($14,000) |
| Net cash from operating activities | $197,000 |
Notice: the totals are identical — $197,000 in both cases. The direct method shows how that $197,000 was generated; the indirect method shows why operating cash flow differs from net income.
Step-by-Step Conversion From Indirect to Direct
To convert from indirect to direct, you need the income statement plus the changes in operating working capital accounts from the comparative balance sheet. Each income statement line item is adjusted for the related balance sheet changes to derive the cash equivalent. Here is the systematic approach:
Cash Collected From Customers
Start with revenue (accrual basis) and adjust for changes in accounts receivable and unearned revenue:
+ Beginning accounts receivable (or − increase in AR, + decrease in AR)
+ Increase in unearned revenue (cash received before earned)
= Cash collected from customers
Harlow Corp: Revenue $874,000 − Increase in AR $31,000 = $843,000 ✓
Logic: if AR increased, the company recognised more revenue than it collected — subtract the AR increase. If AR decreased, collected more than recognised — add the AR decrease.
Cash Paid to Suppliers
This requires two adjustments — first for inventory changes (accrual cost of goods sold vs cash purchases), then for accounts payable changes (accrual purchases vs cash payments):
+ Increase in inventory (or − decrease in inventory)
− Increase in accounts payable (or + decrease in accounts payable)
= Cash paid to suppliers
Harlow: COGS $516,000 + Inventory increase $22,000 − AP increase $18,000 = $520,000
Wait — that gives $520,000. Our direct method shows $512,000. The difference is because
COGS includes $8,000 of depreciation on manufacturing equipment. Subtract that:
$520,000 − $8,000 = $512,000 ✓
The depreciation embedded in COGS must be removed before computing cash paid to suppliers, because that depreciation is non-cash. Only the variable and cash-based portions of COGS represent actual cash paid to suppliers.
Other Operating Cash Payments
Cash paid to employees: Start with wages expense; adjust for changes in wages payable (accrued payroll). If wages payable increased, more was expensed than paid — subtract the increase. Harlow: Wages expense $102,000 − increase in wages payable $4,000 = $98,000.
Cash paid for interest: Start with interest expense; adjust for changes in interest payable. Harlow: Interest expense $24,000 − increase in interest payable $2,000 = $22,000.
Cash paid for income taxes: Start with income tax expense; adjust for changes in taxes payable and deferred taxes. The deferred tax guide explains how current vs deferred portions of tax expense affect cash taxes paid. Harlow: Tax expense $21,000 − increase in taxes payable $7,000 = $14,000.
Why Analysts Prefer the Direct Method
Despite its rarity in practice, the direct method provides more information. It shows exactly where cash came from and where it went in operations — allowing analysts to verify the quality of earnings by comparing revenue to cash collected, and to spot deteriorating cash conversion before it shows up in net income. A company with strong net income but cash collected from customers growing much slower than revenue is potentially building a receivables problem.
Cash Flow Statement Practice — Both Methods
PrepQBank covers indirect method, direct method, and conversion questions with step-by-step explanations. Free plan gives 8 questions/week. Upgrade to Student ($7/mo) or Pro (unlimited) to practise every cash flow scenario until it's automatic.