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πŸ’° Working Capital Calculator

Enter current assets and current liabilities to calculate working capital and the current ratio.

Working Capital
β€”
Current Ratio β€”

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01

What Is Working Capital? (Standard Financial Definition)

Working capital is a standard financial accounting metric representing the net liquid resources a company has available in the short term: Working Capital = Current Assets βˆ’ Current Liabilities. Current assets include cash, accounts receivable, and inventory β€” items convertible to cash within a year β€” while current liabilities include accounts payable and short-term debt due within a year. For example, with current assets of $50,000 and current liabilities of $30,000, working capital is $50,000 βˆ’ $30,000 = $20,000. Positive working capital means a company can cover its short-term obligations with resources to spare; negative working capital signals a need for caution on near-term solvency.
02

Why Pair It With the Current Ratio

Because working capital is an absolute dollar figure, its meaning depends heavily on company size β€” so the standard analytical practice is to check it alongside the relative metric Current Ratio = Current Assets Γ· Current Liabilities. In the example above, the current ratio is 50,000 Γ· 30,000 = 1.67, meaning $1.67 of current assets exist for every $1 of current liabilities. A current ratio of 1 or higher is generally read as healthy short-term solvency, while below 1 signals liquidity risk β€” though inventory-heavy industries should also check supplementary metrics like the quick ratio.

MetricFormulaExample ($50,000 assets / $30,000 liabilities)
Working CapitalCurrent Assets βˆ’ Current Liabilities50,000 βˆ’ 30,000 = 20,000
Current RatioCurrent Assets Γ· Current Liabilities50,000 Γ· 30,000 = 1.67

Frequently asked questions

How is working capital calculated?
Working Capital = Current Assets βˆ’ Current Liabilities. Current assets are convertible to cash within a year; current liabilities are due within a year.
What does negative working capital mean?
It means current liabilities exceed current assets, which can signal a shortage of liquidity to cover near-term obligations β€” though interpretation varies by industry and cash-flow pattern.
What is a good current ratio?
A range of roughly 1.5 to 2.0 is often considered stable, but the right benchmark depends on industry and business model β€” fast inventory-turnover businesses can operate healthily with a lower ratio.