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Cash flow statement

Learn what a cash flow statement is, how to read one, and why it matters for your business.

Published Monday 22 June 2026

Table of contents

Key takeaways

  • A cash flow statement tracks the actual cash moving in and out of your business over a set period, showing whether you can cover day-to-day costs regardless of profit on paper.
  • It's split into 3 sections: operating activities, investing activities, and financing activities, each revealing a different source or use of cash.
  • Positive cash flow means more money is coming in than going out, but it doesn't always mean your business is profitable, and negative cash flow isn't always a problem.
  • Reading your cash flow statement regularly helps you spot payment delays, plan for quieter months, and make confident decisions about spending, hiring, or borrowing.

What is a cash flow statement?

A cash flow statement is a financial report that shows how much cash moves in and out of your business over a specific period. It's sometimes called a statement of cash flows.

Unlike a profit and loss statement, which includes non-cash items like depreciation, a cash flow statement focuses purely on actual money received and spent. This makes it one of the most practical tools for understanding whether your business can pay its bills, invest in growth, or repay debts.

What does a cash flow statement show?

A cash flow statement gives you a clear picture of your business's liquidity. It answers a straightforward question: where did your cash come from, and where did it go?

Specifically, it shows you:

  • How much cash your core business operations generate
  • Whether you're spending cash on long-term assets like equipment or property
  • How you're funding the business, whether through loans, repaying debt, or owner contributions
  • Your opening cash balance, the net movement across all 3 areas, and your closing cash balance

This helps you see whether your business is self-sustaining or relying on borrowing to stay afloat.

Who uses a cash flow statement?

Cash flow statements aren't just for accountants. Several groups rely on them to make decisions about your business.

  • Business owners and managers: you can use it for day-to-day planning, budgeting, and spotting cash shortfalls before they become a problem.
  • Investors and lenders: banks and investors look at your cash flow to assess whether you can repay a loan or generate a return on their investment.
  • Accountants and bookkeepers: your accountant uses it alongside your profit and loss and balance sheet to give you a full picture of financial health.

The 3 parts of a cash flow statement

Handy resources

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Every cash flow statement is divided into 3 sections. Each one covers a different type of cash movement, and together they explain how your overall cash position changed during the period.

Operating activities

This is the most important section because it shows whether your core business generates enough cash to keep running. Operating activities include cash received from customers and cash paid out for everyday costs.

Common items in this section include:

  • Cash received from sales
  • Payments to suppliers
  • Wages and salaries
  • Tax payments, including VAT
  • Interest paid or received

If operating cash flow is consistently positive, your business is generating enough money from its day-to-day work to cover its running costs.

Investing activities

This section records cash spent on or received from long-term assets. It's about the bigger purchases and sales that shape your business over time.

Typical investing activities include:

  • Buying equipment, vehicles, or property
  • Selling a business asset
  • Purchasing or selling investments

Negative cash flow from investing activities isn't necessarily bad. It often means you're putting money into growing your business.

Financing activities

This section covers how your business is funded. It includes cash from loans, repayments of debt, owner contributions, and any dividends paid out.

Common financing activities include:

  • Taking out a business loan
  • Repaying a loan or credit facility
  • Owner putting money into the business
  • Dividend payments

A business that regularly relies on financing activities to cover operating losses may be building up unsustainable debt.

Direct method vs indirect method

There are 2 ways to prepare the operating activities section of a cash flow statement: the direct method and the indirect method. Both arrive at the same figure for net operating cash flow, but they take different routes to get there.

The direct method lists actual cash receipts and payments. You record every cash transaction from operations individually. It gives a detailed, transparent view, but it can be time-consuming to prepare.

The indirect method starts with your net profit and adjusts for non-cash items and changes in working capital. For example, it adds back depreciation (which reduces profit but doesn't involve actual cash leaving the business) and adjusts for movements in trade debtors and creditors.

Most UK small businesses use the indirect method. It's simpler to prepare from existing accounting records and is the standard approach under Financial Reporting Standard 102 (FRS 102), which governs financial reporting for most UK companies. Your accountant can advise on which method suits your business.

Positive vs negative cash flow

The bottom line of your cash flow statement tells you whether your business had positive or negative cash flow during the period. Both are worth understanding in context.

Positive cash flow

Positive cash flow means more cash came into your business than went out. This is generally a healthy sign. It means you can cover your costs, reinvest in the business, and build a cash buffer for quieter months.

However, positive cash flow doesn't always mean your business is profitable. For example, taking out a large loan creates a cash inflow, but it also creates a future repayment obligation. Always look at where the cash is coming from, not just the total.

Negative cash flow

Negative cash flow means more cash left your business than came in. This can feel alarming, but it's not always a crisis.

Planned investments, such as buying new equipment or fitting out a new premises, can cause negative cash flow in a single period. What matters is the trend. If your operating cash flow is negative over several periods, it could signal a deeper problem. A one-off dip from a planned purchase is very different from ongoing losses.

How to read a cash flow statement

Reading a cash flow statement doesn't require an accounting qualification. Start with operating cash flow; it's the most telling figure because it shows whether your core business is self-funding.

Here's a practical approach to interpreting the numbers:

  • Check whether operating cash flow is positive. If it is, your day-to-day business is generating cash.
  • Compare operating cash flow across several periods. A consistent decline is a warning sign, even if the figure is still positive.
  • Look at investing activities. Large outflows here might reflect growth spending, which is usually healthy.
  • Review financing activities. Heavy reliance on loans to cover operating costs can indicate a cash flow problem.

Watch for these warning signs over multiple periods:

  • Operating cash flow declining quarter after quarter
  • Borrowing frequently to cover everyday expenses
  • Selling assets to generate cash for running costs

If you spot any of these patterns, it's a good time to talk to your accountant about the underlying causes.

Cash flow statement vs income statement vs balance sheet

Your cash flow statement is 1 of 3 core financial statements. Each shows something different, and you need all 3 to get a full picture of your business finances.

  • Cash flow statement: tracks actual cash movements over a period. Shows whether you can meet your financial obligations right now.
  • Income statement (profit and loss): shows your turnover, costs, and profit or loss over a period. Includes non-cash items like depreciation, so profit doesn't always equal cash in the bank.
  • Balance sheet: a snapshot of what your business owns (assets), owes (liabilities), and the owner's equity at a single point in time.

A common situation that illustrates why all 3 matter: your profit and loss might show a healthy profit, but your cash flow statement reveals you're struggling to collect payments from customers. Meanwhile, your balance sheet shows growing trade debtors. Together, they tell you that late payments are squeezing your cash position despite strong sales.

Cash flow statement example

Here's a simplified cash flow statement for a fictional UK small business, a graphic design consultancy, for the quarter ending 31 March 2026.

Operating activities

  • Cash received from clients: +£45,000
  • Payments to suppliers: -£8,000
  • Staff wages: -£18,000
  • VAT payment: -£3,200
  • Office rent: -£4,500

Net cash from operating activities: +£11,300

Investing activities

  • Purchase of new computer equipment: -£3,500

Net cash from investing activities: -£3,500

Financing activities

  • Loan repayment: -£2,000

Net cash from financing activities: -£2,000

Opening cash balance: £12,000

Net cash movement: +£5,800

Closing cash balance: £17,800

In this example, the business generated £11,300 from its core operations, spent £3,500 on equipment, and repaid £2,000 of a loan. The closing balance of £17,800 is higher than the opening balance, which is a positive sign. The key takeaway is that the core business is generating more cash than it spends on day-to-day operations.

Why cash flow statements matter for your business

Cash flow is what keeps your business running. Even a profitable business can fail if it doesn't have enough cash to cover expenses when they're due. According to Xero Small Business Insights, UK small businesses waited an average of 29.0 days to be paid in early 2026, with invoices arriving 8.2 days late on average.

That gap between issuing an invoice and receiving payment is exactly where cash flow statements prove their value. They help you see whether late payments are putting pressure on your ability to pay suppliers, staff, or tax obligations on time.

Regularly reviewing your cash flow statement helps you:

  • Plan for quieter trading periods by building cash reserves during busier months
  • Identify whether you need to chase overdue invoices more actively
  • Decide whether you can afford to hire, invest, or expand
  • Present a clear financial picture to lenders or investors
  • Stay on top of VAT and Making Tax Digital (MTD) requirements with accurate, up-to-date records

For UK businesses preparing for MTD for Income Tax, having clear, accurate financial records, including cash flow data, makes compliance significantly easier.

Take control of your cash flow

Understanding your cash flow statement is the first step. The next is making sure you have accurate, real-time financial data so you can act on what it tells you. Xero's cloud accounting software gives you live cash flow tracking and automated bank reconciliation, so you can see exactly where your money is at any time.

Try Xero for your business and get one month free.

FAQs on cash flow statements

Here are answers to some frequently asked questions about cash flow statements.

Do small businesses need to produce a cash flow statement?

Most UK small businesses aren't legally required to produce a cash flow statement, as FRS 102 Section 1A exempts small companies. However, preparing one is still valuable because it gives you a clear view of your liquidity and helps with planning.

How often should you review your cash flow statement?

Monthly is a good rhythm for most small businesses. Reviewing it regularly helps you spot trends, catch late payments early, and plan ahead for periods when cash might be tight.

What's the difference between cash flow and profit?

Profit is the difference between your turnover and your costs, including non-cash items like depreciation. Cash flow is the actual money moving in and out of your bank account. You can be profitable on paper but still run out of cash if customers are slow to pay.

Can a business survive with negative cash flow?

In the short term, yes, especially if the negative cash flow is caused by planned investment. However, sustained negative operating cash flow usually signals a problem that needs addressing, such as falling sales, rising costs, or slow-paying customers.

What's the easiest way to track cash flow?

Cloud accounting software like Xero connects to your bank account and updates your cash position automatically. This gives you a real-time view without manually tracking every transaction.

Explore related accounting terms in the Xero glossary:

Learn more about cash flow statements

Find more guides and resources on managing your business finances:

Handy resources

Advisor directory

You can search for experts in our advisor directory

Find an advisor

How to manage your finances and cash flow

Learn about money management for your small business

Read article

Financial reporting

Keep track of your performance with accounting reports

Find out more

Disclaimer

This glossary is for small business owners. The definitions are written with their requirements in mind. More detailed definitions can be found in accounting textbooks or from an accounting professional. Xero does not provide accounting, tax, business or legal advice.