
Balance Sheet for Small Business (2026): A Plain-English Guide + Free Template
A balance sheet is a snapshot of what your business owns and owes. Learn how to read and build one in 2026, with a plain-English example and a free template.

A cash flow statement is the financial report that tracks actual cash moving in and out of a business over a period, split into three sections: operating, investing, and financing activities. It starts with your beginning cash balance, walks through every inflow and outflow, and ends at a figure that must match your bank account to the dollar. It is the report that explains how a business can post a profit and still run out of money.
Key takeaways:

Save this cheat sheet — the three sections and what belongs in each, in one image.
A cash flow statement is a financial report that tracks every dollar of actual cash moving into and out of your business over a set period, usually a month, a quarter, or a year. It answers one question that no other report answers directly: where did my cash come from, and where did it go?
Your profit and loss statement tells you whether you earned more than you spent. Your balance sheet tells you what you own and owe on a single day. Neither one tells you whether you can make payroll on Friday. The cash flow statement does. It starts with the cash you had at the beginning of the period, walks through every category of inflow and outflow, and ends with the cash you have now. If those two numbers do not reconcile, something is missing.
For a small business, this is the most honest report you have. It cannot be inflated by an invoice you sent but have not collected, and it cannot be hidden by an expense you booked but have not paid. It deals only in money that has actually changed hands.
Profit and cash differ because most books run on an accrual basis, the standard under U.S. generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP): revenue is recorded when you earn it and expenses when you incur them, regardless of when money moves. That is great for matching effort to reward, but it means your profit number can drift far from your bank balance. At Anna Money, across 60,000+ small businesses, "profitable on paper, broke in the bank" was the most common panic we saw.
Here is a mini scenario. Say you run a small design studio. In March you:
On paper, March looks profitable. In your bank account, you spent $11,500 of real cash and collected nothing yet. The five usual suspects behind the gap:
| Item | Effect on profit (P&L) | Effect on cash |
|---|---|---|
| Accrual revenue | Counts the day you invoice | Nothing until the client pays |
| Accounts receivable | Sits as income | Cash locked in unpaid invoices |
| Inventory | No expense until sold | Cash leaves the moment you buy stock |
| Loan principal | Not an expense (only interest is) | Full payment leaves the account |
| Owner draws | Never hit the P&L | Real cash leaves the business |
The cash flow statement exists to translate your profit number back into the truth your bank account already knows.
A cash flow statement does not tell you whether you are profitable; that is the job of the profit and loss statement, and a month of positive cash flow can hide an unprofitable business propped up by a new loan. It does not show what you own and owe (the balance sheet does), it does not predict next month (it is historical unless you build a forecast), and it says nothing about revenue you have earned but not collected. Use it alongside the other two statements, not instead of them.
Every cash flow statement, from a corner bakery to a public company, splits cash into the same three buckets defined by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB). Understanding what belongs where is most of the battle.
Operating activities are the cash flows from the core, day-to-day work of the business: customer payments coming in; payroll, rent, supplies, software, and utilities going out. This is the section that tells you whether your actual business model generates cash. A bakery's flour, oven repairs, and counter staff all live here.
Investing activities are the cash flows from buying or selling long-term assets, the things you purchase to run the business for years rather than consume right away. Buying a delivery van, a commercial espresso machine, or a building shows up as an outflow. Selling old equipment shows up as an inflow. A negative number here is often a healthy sign that you are reinvesting in growth.
Financing activities are the cash flows between your business and its lenders and owners. Taking out a loan or line of credit is an inflow. Repaying loan principal is an outflow. Owner contributions are inflows; owner draws and distributions are outflows. This is where loan principal and owner draws, the two items that silently drain so many accounts, finally show up.
Add the three sections together and you get the net change in cash for the period. Add that to your starting cash and you get your ending cash, which should match your bank statement to the dollar.
There are two ways to build the operating section, and the difference is simpler than it sounds. The direct method lists raw cash receipts and payments; the indirect method starts with net income and adjusts it back to cash. The investing and financing sections are identical under both.
| Direct method | Indirect method | |
|---|---|---|
| Starting point | Actual cash received and paid | Net income from the P&L |
| Operating section shows | Cash from customers, cash to suppliers, cash to employees | Net income, plus non-cash add-backs, plus working-capital changes |
| Data needed | Cash-level detail for every category | Your P&L and two balance sheets |
| Effort | Tedious; accounting systems store accrual records, not cash buckets | Fast; reuses numbers you already have |
| Who uses it | Rare in practice | Nearly every small business; surveys put use among public companies in the high nineties |
| FASB view | Encouraged | Allowed, and dominant in practice |
In practice, the indirect method is what almost every small business sees: it is faster to prepare and stays consistent with accrual books. Everything below uses it.
Here is a complete cash flow statement for a fictional small business, Riverside Bakehouse LLC, for the month of May 2026. The bakery posted a tidy net income, but watch what happens to its cash.
| Line item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Operating Activities | |
| Net income (from P&L) | $8,000 |
| Add back: depreciation (non-cash) | +$1,200 |
| Increase in accounts receivable (uncollected sales) | −$3,500 |
| Increase in inventory (bought flour and supplies) | −$2,000 |
| Increase in accounts payable (bills not yet paid) | +$1,300 |
| Net cash from operating activities | $5,000 |
| Investing Activities | |
| Purchase of a new commercial oven | −$6,500 |
| Net cash from investing activities | −$6,500 |
| Financing Activities | |
| Equipment loan received | +$5,000 |
| Loan principal repayment | −$1,000 |
| Owner draw | −$4,000 |
| Net cash from financing activities | $0 |
| Net change in cash for May | −$1,500 |
| Beginning cash (May 1) | $7,200 |
| Ending cash (May 31) | $5,700 |
Read that bottom block again. The bakery earned $8,000 in profit and still ended the month with $1,500 less cash than it started. The oven purchase, the inventory build-up, the unpaid invoices, and the owner draw together pulled more cash out than the business generated. Nothing here is fraud or mismanagement; it is just the normal gap between profit and cash, laid out so you can see it.
Once you have the statement in front of you, a few signals matter most.
Start with operating cash flow. This is the single most important line. If your operating activities consistently produce positive cash, the core business funds itself. If operating cash flow is negative month after month while profit looks fine, you are bleeding cash on receivables or inventory and leaning on loans or your own savings to survive.
Watch the danger signs. A growing gap between net income and operating cash flow usually means receivables or inventory are climbing. Positive total cash that comes only from new loans, not operations, is a warning, not a win. And any month where ending cash drops toward zero deserves immediate attention.
Calculate your runway. Divide your current cash balance by your average monthly net cash burn. If you hold $20,000 and lose $4,000 of cash a month, you have roughly five months of runway. That single number changes how you make every decision.
These three reports work as a set, and each answers a different question.
You need all three. Profit without cash flow is a trap, and cash without profit is a countdown.
You have three realistic options, from most manual to most automatic.
Spreadsheet. Start with the template at the end of this guide. Pull net income from your P&L, add back depreciation, then compare this period's balance sheet to last period's to find the changes in receivables, inventory, and payables. List your asset purchases and your loan and owner movements. It works, but it depends on clean, categorized books.
Accounting software. Most bookkeeping tools generate a cash flow statement once your transactions are categorized. The report is only as accurate as the categorization underneath, since every line traces back to the debit-and-credit entries behind your books.
Automatically, from categorized transactions. If your bank feed is connected and every transaction is already sorted into the right category, the statement assembles itself. This is exactly the problem automated bookkeeping solves: data flows from your bank, gets categorized, and the cash picture updates in real time.
The hardest part of a cash flow statement is not the math; it is keeping every transaction categorized so the numbers are trustworthy. Jupid is an AI accountant that lives in WhatsApp and iMessage: connect your business bank account and it auto-categorizes every transaction with 95.9% accuracy, so your cash picture stays current instead of being reconstructed at month-end. Ask a plain question like "how much cash did I actually make this month?" or "what's my runway right now?" and get a real answer in seconds, with the reasoning behind it. Try Jupid.
Copy this skeleton into a spreadsheet and fill in your own numbers each period. It uses the indirect method most small businesses rely on.
| Line item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Operating Activities | |
| Net income (from P&L) | $ |
| Add back: depreciation and amortization | + $ |
| Change in accounts receivable | +/− $ |
| Change in inventory | +/− $ |
| Change in accounts payable | +/− $ |
| Change in other working capital | +/− $ |
| Net cash from operating activities | $ |
| Investing Activities | |
| Purchase of equipment or property | − $ |
| Sale of assets | + $ |
| Net cash from investing activities | $ |
| Financing Activities | |
| Loans or credit received | + $ |
| Loan principal repayments | − $ |
| Owner contributions | + $ |
| Owner draws or distributions | − $ |
| Net cash from financing activities | $ |
| Net change in cash | $ |
| Beginning cash balance | $ |
| Ending cash balance | $ |
Tip: for receivables, inventory, and payables, an increase in an asset uses cash (subtract it), and an increase in a liability frees up cash (add it).
This article is for general educational purposes and does not constitute accounting, tax, or financial advice. Cash flow reporting and accounting methods vary by business. Consult a qualified accountant or tax professional about your specific situation.

CEO & Co-Founder
Fintech CEO with 10+ years building accounting and financial technology products. Previously co-founded and scaled an AI-powered accounting platform to $30M revenue and 100K+ business users, achieving 30,000 customers per accountant through automation — recognized by CNBC as a top fintech company. Holds a Master's in Management Information Systems. At Jupid, he leads the development of AI-native bookkeeping, tax, and compliance tools designed for freelancers and small business owners.

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