Free SaaS Finance Tool
Working Capital
Calculator
Enter your current assets and liabilities to calculate working capital, your current and quick ratios, and non-cash working capital, instantly.
Working capital by the numbers
How working capital works + the formula
Working capital is your short-term operating liquidity: the cash and near-cash you hold against the bills due within a year. People use "working capital" and "net working capital" interchangeably, and they mean the same thing.
Working capital = Current assets − Current liabilities
Current ratio = Current assets ÷ Current liabilities
Non-cash WC = (Current assets − Cash)
− (Current liabilities − Short-term debt)
For valuation, use non-cash working capital. It strips out cash and interest-bearing short-term debt to isolate the operating capital tied up in the business, the figure that feeds free cash flow.
Take the prefilled SaaS example. Current assets of $8,000k minus current liabilities of $8,500k gives working capital of –$500k. Strip out the $4,000k of cash and the $800k current portion of debt, and non-cash working capital is –$3,700k.
Every input comes off the balance sheet, classified current versus non-current under ASC 210. Two lines people misplace: deferred revenue and the current portion of long-term debt. Both belong in current liabilities.
Net working capital vs. working capital vs. non-cash WC
Net working capital and working capital are the same thing: current assets minus current liabilities. Non-cash working capital is the variant that matters for valuation. It removes cash and interest-bearing short-term debt and leaves the operating items that move with the business: receivables, inventory, payables, and deferred revenue.
Use working capital to check short-term liquidity. Use non-cash working capital when you're modeling cash flow or enterprise value, because cash and debt are counted elsewhere in a valuation and would otherwise be double-counted.
Positive vs. negative working capital, and why negative isn't always bad
Negative working capital isn't automatically a warning sign. For subscription and supplier-financed businesses, it usually means customers and vendors are funding operations, which is a sign of strength, not distress.
Positive working capital means your current assets cover your current liabilities with room to spare, the textbook comfort zone. Negative means the reverse on paper. But the paper reading misleads for SaaS. Deferred revenue sits in current liabilities. It's cash customers paid upfront for service you haven't delivered yet, so it drags reported working capital down while the money stays in your account. As long as deferred revenue is growing and payables are current, negative working capital is the model doing exactly what it should. Aswath Damodaran's valuation work treats this kind of customer and supplier financing as a real funding source, not a liability to fear.
Change in working capital & free cash flow
The change in net working capital, not the level, is what hits cash flow. When net working capital rises, cash is tied up and free cash flow falls. When it drops, cash is released.
FCF = Operating cash flow − CapEx − Change in net working capital
This is why fast-growing companies can be profitable on paper yet cash-hungry: growth builds receivables and inventory, and that increase consumes cash before customers pay. Track the direction of the change each period, not just the ending balance.
The cash conversion cycle
The cash conversion cycle measures how many days cash is locked up between paying suppliers and collecting from customers. Shorter is better, and a negative cycle means you collect before you pay.
CCC = DSO + DIO − DPO
That's days sales outstanding, plus days inventory outstanding, minus days payable outstanding. The 1,000 largest U.S. public companies averaged a 37-day cash conversion cycle in 2025, per the Hackett Group, a 4% improvement year over year. SaaS businesses with upfront billing and no inventory often run a negative cycle, collecting subscription cash before the related costs come due.
How to improve working capital
Improving working capital comes down to three levers: collect faster, pay strategically, and hold less idle cash and inventory.
Collect faster. Tighten credit terms, invoice on delivery, and automate dunning to bring down DSO. Pay strategically. Take the full terms you've negotiated without going late, extending DPO without straining suppliers. Hold less. Trim excess inventory and put idle cash to work instead of letting it sit.
The Hackett Group estimates $1.7 trillion in excess working capital is trapped across large U.S. companies, most of it recoverable through these routines. For SaaS, shifting to annual upfront billing is the single biggest lever: it converts deferred revenue into cash on hand.
Track working capital live in your GL. Not in a spreadsheet.
DualEntry rolls up current assets and liabilities in real time and keeps deferred revenue and current-portion-of-debt correctly classified under ASC 606 / ASC 210, so working capital, current ratio, and CCC are always live.
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Working Capital FAQ
What is the working capital formula?
Current assets minus current liabilities. That's it. If you're valuing the business rather than checking liquidity, use non-cash working capital instead, which pulls out cash and interest-bearing short-term debt before you subtract.
How do you calculate working capital?
Take current assets and current liabilities off the balance sheet and subtract the second from the first. The Detailed mode above does it line by line and gives you the current ratio, quick ratio, and non-cash working capital in the same pass.
What is a good working capital ratio?
Most industries land between 1.2 and 2.0, but there's no single right answer. SaaS and retail routinely run under 1.0, sometimes negative, and stay healthy because deferred revenue or fast inventory turns cover the gap. Read the ratio against your model, not a textbook.
Is negative working capital bad?
Usually not. In a subscription or supplier-financed business, it means customers and vendors are bankrolling operations, which is a good place to be. The test is whether deferred revenue keeps growing and payables stay current. If both hold, negative is fine.
Why does deferred revenue reduce working capital?
Because it counts as a current liability. When a customer pays upfront for a year of service, that cash lands on your books as a liability until you deliver it, so reported working capital drops even though the money is already in your account.
How does the change in working capital affect cash flow?
Direction is everything. A rise in net working capital ties up cash and pulls free cash flow down; a fall frees it back up. The mechanics: FCF = operating cash flow − CapEx − change in net working capital.
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