Trade payables days
Trade payables days is the average number of days a business takes to pay its suppliers, calculated as accounts payable divided by daily cost of goods sold; a longer figure eases short-term cash pressure.
FrameworkRatio analysis
See it move
Trade payables days measures how long a business takes to pay its suppliers: accounts payable divided by cost of goods sold, times days in the period. With €800,000 in payables and €4,000,000 of cost of goods sold, (800,000 ÷ 4,000,000) × 365 = 73 days of supplier financing.
The formula
Variables
- Accounts payable (trade creditors at period end) (€)
- Cost of goods sold (or cost of purchases where more appropriate) (€)
- Days in period (typically 365 for an annual calculation) (days)
Also called the creditor payment period; a longer figure eases short-term cash pressure but must not breach agreed supplier terms.
Check yourself
A company's accounts payable balance is €500,000 and its annual cost of goods sold is €3,650,000. What is trade payables days, and which statement best describes extending this figure?