Net Income (NI)

Net Income (NI)

Net Income (NI)

What Is Net Income (NI)?

Net income (NI), also called net earnings, is calculated as sales minus?cost of goods sold, selling, general and administrative expenses, operating expenses, depreciation, interest, taxes, and other expenses. It is a useful number for investors to assess how much revenue exceeds the expenses of an organization. This number appears on a company's income statement and is also an indicator of a company's profitability.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

Net income (NI) is calculated as revenues minus expenses, interest, and taxes.

  • Earnings per share are calculated using NI.
  • Investors should review the numbers used to calculate NI because expenses can be hidden in accounting methods, or revenues can be inflated.
  • NI also represents an individual's total earnings or pre-tax earnings after factoring?deductions?and taxes in gross income.

Net income also refers to an individual's income after taking taxes and deductions into account.

Calculating Net Income

Understanding Net Income (NI)

Businesses use net income to calculate their earnings per share. Business analysts often refer to net income as the bottom line since it is at the bottom of the income statement. Analysts in the United Kingdom know?NI?as profit attributable to shareholders.

“Net income (NI) is known as the "bottom line" as it appears as the last line on the income statement once all expenses, interest, and taxes have been subtracted from revenues.”

Calculating NI for Businesses

To calculate net income for a business, start with a company's total revenue. From this figure, subtract the business's expenses and operating costs to calculate the business's earnings before tax. Deduct tax from this amount to find the NI.

NI, like other accounting measures, is susceptible to manipulation through such things as aggressive revenue recognition or hiding expenses. When basing an investment decision on NI, investors should review the quality of the numbers used to arrive at the taxable income and?NI.

Personal Gross Income vs. NI

Gross income refers to an individual's total earnings or pre-tax earnings, and NI refers to the difference after factoring?deductions?and taxes into gross income. To calculate taxable income, which is the figure used by the?Internal Revenue Service?to determine income tax, taxpayers subtract deductions from gross income. The difference between taxable income and income tax is an individual's NI.

For example, an individual has $60,000 in gross income?and qualifies for $10,000 in deductions. That individual's taxable income is $50,000 with an effective tax rate of 13.88% giving an income tax payment $6,939.50?and NI of $43,060.50.

NI on Tax Returns

In the United States, individual taxpayers submit a?version of Form 1040 to the IRS to report annual earnings. This form does not have a line for net income. Instead, it has lines to record gross income,?adjusted gross income (AGI), and taxable income.

After noting their gross income, taxpayers subtract certain income sources such as Social Security benefits and qualifying deductions such as student loan interest. The difference is their AGI. Although the terms are sometimes used interchangeably, net income and AGI are?two different things. Taxpayers then subtract standard or?itemized deductions?from their AGI to determine their taxable income. As stated above, the difference between taxable income and income tax is the individual's NI, but this number is not noted on individual tax forms.

NI on Paycheck Stubs

Most paycheck stubs have a line devoted to NI. This is the amount that appears on an employee's check. The number is the employee's gross income, minus taxes, and retirement account contributions.

No alt text provided for this image
Jairton Basso

Production Manager - FRASLE Mobility - RANDONCORP

2 年

Fantastic ????

要查看或添加评论,请登录

KRISHN DIXIT的更多文章

  • ???? ??? ???????? ?????? ?? ??:

    ???? ??? ???????? ?????? ?? ??:

    ???? ??? ???????? ?????? ?? ??: ???? ????? ??? ??? ?? ????? ?????? ?????? ?? ????? ???????? ?????? ???? ??? ????????…

  • SWIFT Payments: What is It & How Does It Work?

    SWIFT Payments: What is It & How Does It Work?

    SWIFT Payments: What is It & How Does It Work? A true blue millennial trying to engineer her full time-career around…

  • Top Bitcoin Investors (Holders).

    Top Bitcoin Investors (Holders).

    Top Bitcoin Holders (Top 5 Bitcoin Investors) Bitcoin is the largest blockchain-based digital asset. It is wildly…

  • Deference of total supply and Circulating supply of Cryptocurrency

    Deference of total supply and Circulating supply of Cryptocurrency

    What Is Total Supply? Total supply is defined as the total number of a specific cryptocurrency coin or token that has…

  • What Is The Longest Word In The World?

    What Is The Longest Word In The World?

    What Is The Longest Word In The World? You may have heard that the longest word in the world is…

    2 条评论
  • Neobank

    Neobank

    Neobank (New way of Banking): Features, Development & Challenges. Today's students are a generation of people who will…

    2 条评论
  • Systematic Risk

    Systematic Risk

    Systematic Risk What Is Systematic Risk? Systematic risk refers to the risk inherent to the entire market or market…

  • Hash

    Hash

    Complete rundown of what hashing algorithms are and how they work If Cryptography was a body, its Hashing Algorithm…

  • What is Polygon (MATIC)? Definition, Strengths, and Weaknesses

    What is Polygon (MATIC)? Definition, Strengths, and Weaknesses

    What is Polygon (MATIC)? Definition, Strengths, and Weaknesses What is Polygon (MATIC)? Polygon is a cryptocurrency…

  • IBAN

    IBAN

    What Is an International Bank Account Number (IBAN) and How Does It Work What Is an International Bank Account Number…

    2 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了