Net income
Net income is the profit remaining after all expenses — cost of goods sold, operating costs, interest, and income tax — have been deducted from revenue. It sits at the foot of the income statement, often called the bottom line.
Also known asnet profit · bottom line
See it move
The infographic is a waterfall chart that opens at revenue of €500,000 and descends through four deduction bars: cost of goods sold (€280,000), operating expenses (€120,000), interest (€10,000), and tax (€18,000). The final bar lands at net income of €72,000, the residual that belongs to the owners after all claims on revenue have been settled.
The formula
Variables
- Net income (the bottom line) (€)
- Total revenue (€)
- Cost of goods sold (€)
- Operating expenses (selling, general and administrative) (€)
- Interest expense (€)
- Income tax expense (€)
Net income flows into retained earnings on the balance sheet each period and is the residual available to shareholders.
Check yourself
A company reports for the year: revenue €600,000; cost of goods sold €330,000; operating expenses €95,000; interest expense €18,000; income tax €31,400. What is net income?
If you trained under a national GAAP
DE · HGBWhere national-GAAP intuition diverges from the international standard
HGB (German)
Under HGB the annual result (Jahresüberschuss) is a single bottom-line figure; almost all gains and losses — including foreign exchange differences and changes to provisions — pass through this line. There is no separate other comprehensive income section, so the reported net income captures a broader range of value changes than its IFRS counterpart.
IFRS
IAS 1 splits performance reporting into profit or loss and other comprehensive income (OCI). Remeasurements such as unrealised fair value movements on certain financial instruments, revaluation surpluses on non-current assets, and actuarial gains and losses on defined-benefit pension plans are recognised in OCI and may never be recycled to profit or loss, meaning they permanently bypass the net income line.