Balance Sheet Ratios Explained

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Balance sheet ratios measure how efficiently a company uses its assets, manages its obligations, and maintains financial health — all derived from a single financial statement. A company with $500,000 in current assets and $250,000 in current liabilities has a current ratio of 2.0 — meaning it holds $2 of liquid assets for every $1 of short-term debt. Balance sheet ratios fall into four categories: liquidity, solvency, efficiency, and leverage. Each reveals a different dimension of financial performance that income statement metrics alone cannot show.

What Are Balance Sheet Ratios?

Balance sheet ratios are financial metrics calculated entirely or primarily from balance sheet figures — assets, liabilities, and shareholders’ equity. Unlike income statement ratios (which measure profitability over a period), balance sheet ratios measure financial position at a specific point in time. They answer four fundamental questions every analyst, investor, and manager needs answered:

  • Liquidity: Can the company meet its short-term obligations as they fall due?
  • Solvency: Can the company sustain itself long-term and service its debt obligations?
  • Efficiency: How productively is the company deploying its asset base to generate revenue?
  • Leverage: How much of the company’s asset base is financed by debt versus equity?

The Four Categories of Balance Sheet Ratios

1. Liquidity Ratios — Short-Term Obligation Coverage

Liquidity ratios measure whether a company has sufficient liquid assets to cover its short-term liabilities — obligations due within 12 months. Low liquidity ratios signal potential cash flow problems; excessively high ratios may indicate idle capital.

RatioFormulaWhat It MeasuresHealthy Range
Current RatioCurrent Assets ÷ Current LiabilitiesBroad short-term coverage1.5 – 3.0x
Quick Ratio(Current Assets − Inventory) ÷ Current LiabilitiesLiquid-only short-term coverage1.0 – 2.0x
Cash Ratio(Cash + Equivalents) ÷ Current LiabilitiesStrictest liquidity measure0.5 – 1.0x
Defensive Interval RatioLiquid Assets ÷ Daily Operating ExpensesDays company can operate without revenue30 – 90 days
Net Working CapitalCurrent Assets − Current LiabilitiesAbsolute liquidity buffer (in $)Positive
Current Ratio Example: Current Assets $500,000 ÷ Current Liabilities $250,000 = 2.0x — the company holds $2 of liquid assets for every $1 of short-term debt. Quick Ratio Example: (Current Assets $500,000 − Inventory $150,000) ÷ Current Liabilities $250,000 = 1.4x — more conservative, excludes illiquid inventory.

Easily calculate your current ratio with our free Current Ratio Calculator — includes healthy range benchmarks by industry and plain-English liquidity interpretation

2. Solvency Ratios — Long-Term Financial Stability

Solvency ratios assess a company’s ability to meet long-term obligations and remain financially viable over the medium and long term. They are used by credit analysts, rating agencies, and lenders to assess default risk.

RatioFormulaWhat It MeasuresHealthy Range
Debt to Assets RatioTotal Debt ÷ Total AssetsProportion of assets financed by debt< 0.5 (50%)
Debt to Equity RatioTotal Debt ÷ Shareholders’ EquityLeverage relative to equity base< 2.0x (varies by industry)
Equity RatioShareholders’ Equity ÷ Total AssetsProportion of assets financed by equity> 0.5 (50%)
Solvency RatioNet Income + Depreciation ÷ Total LiabilitiesCash generation vs total obligations> 0.20 (20%)
Net Debt to EBITDANet Debt ÷ EBITDAYears of earnings to repay net debt< 3.0x (investment grade)
Debt to Equity Example: Total Debt $800,000 ÷ Equity $400,000 = 2.0x — the company has $2 of debt for every $1 of equity. Elevated but common in capital-intensive industries.

3. Efficiency Ratios — Asset Productivity

Efficiency ratios measure how productively a company converts its balance sheet assets into revenue and cash. They combine balance sheet figures (assets) with income statement figures (revenue, COGS) to produce the most operationally useful metrics in financial analysis.

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RatioFormulaWhat It MeasuresBetter Direction
Asset Turnover RatioNet Sales ÷ Average Total AssetsRevenue generated per $ of assetsHigher = better
Inventory TurnoverCOGS ÷ Average InventoryTimes inventory is sold per yearHigher = better
Days Inventory Outstanding(Avg Inventory ÷ COGS) × 365Days to sell inventoryLower = better
Receivables TurnoverRevenue ÷ Average Accounts ReceivableTimes AR is collected per yearHigher = better
Days Sales Outstanding(Avg AR ÷ Revenue) × 365Days to collect payment from customersLower = better
Payables TurnoverPurchases ÷ Average Accounts PayableTimes AP is paid per yearContext-dependent
Days Payable Outstanding365 ÷ AP TurnoverDays to pay suppliersHigher reduces CCC
Asset Turnover Example: Net Sales $4,500,000 ÷ Average Total Assets $3,000,000 = 1.50x — each dollar of assets generates $1.50 in revenue. DSO Example: (Avg AR $200,000 ÷ Revenue $1,460,000) × 365 = 50 days — the company waits 50 days on average to collect payment.

4. Leverage Ratios — Capital Structure Analysis

Leverage ratios examine how a company finances its operations — through debt, equity, or a combination. They reveal the risk embedded in the capital structure and the degree to which fixed financial obligations (debt interest and principal) could strain the business in a downturn.

RatioFormulaWhat It MeasuresHealthy Range
Financial Leverage RatioTotal Assets ÷ Shareholders’ EquityAsset base relative to equity (equity multiplier)1.5 – 3.0x
Capital Adequacy RatioEquity ÷ Risk-Weighted AssetsFinancial buffer strength≥ 8% (Basel III — banks)
Long-Term Debt to EquityLong-Term Debt ÷ Shareholders’ EquityStructural leverage (LT only)< 1.5x (varies by sector)
Debt RatioTotal Liabilities ÷ Total AssetsProportion of assets funded by liabilities< 0.6 (60%)
Equity MultiplierTotal Assets ÷ Total EquityDuPont leverage componentLower = less leveraged
DuPont Framework: ROE = Net Profit Margin × Asset Turnover × Equity Multiplier. The equity multiplier is the leverage component — higher leverage amplifies both gains and losses.

Use our free Return on Equity Calculator to calculate ROE with full DuPont analysis breakdown — see exactly what is driving profitability from your balance sheet.

Balance Sheet Ratios

CategoryKey RatioFormula (Simplified)Healthy SignalCalculator
LiquidityCurrent RatioCurrent Assets ÷ Current Liabilities1.5 – 3.0xCurrent Ratio Calculator
LiquidityQuick Ratio(CA − Inventory) ÷ CL1.0 – 2.0xQuick Ratio Calculator
LiquidityCash RatioCash ÷ Current Liabilities0.5 – 1.0xCash Ratio Calculator
LiquidityNet Working CapitalCurrent Assets − Current LiabilitiesPositive $Working Capital Calculator
SolvencyDebt to EquityTotal Debt ÷ Equity< 2.0xDebt to Equity Calculator
SolvencyDebt to AssetsTotal Debt ÷ Total Assets< 0.5Debt to Assets Calculator
SolvencyEquity RatioEquity ÷ Total Assets> 0.5Equity Ratio Calculator
EfficiencyAsset TurnoverNet Sales ÷ Avg Total AssetsHigher = betterAsset Turnover Calculator
EfficiencyInventory TurnoverCOGS ÷ Avg InventoryHigher = betterInventory Turnover Calculator
EfficiencyDays Sales Outstanding(Avg AR ÷ Revenue) × 365Lower = betterDSO Calculator
LeverageFinancial LeverageTotal Assets ÷ Equity1.5 – 3.0xFinancial Leverage Calculator
LeverageDebt RatioTotal Liabilities ÷ Total Assets< 0.6Debt Ratio Calculator

How to Read Balance Sheet Ratios Together

No single balance sheet ratio tells the complete financial story. Ratios must be read in combination — and always compared against industry benchmarks and prior periods. A company with a strong current ratio (3.0x) but deteriorating asset turnover (falling from 1.5x to 0.8x) may be building excess inventory or failing to deploy assets productively. The three most powerful ratio combinations are:

  • Liquidity + Solvency: Current ratio (short-term health) alongside debt-to-equity (long-term structure) reveals whether a company is both immediately and structurally sound.
  • Efficiency + Profitability (DuPont): Asset turnover × net profit margin × equity multiplier = ROE. This decomposition shows exactly which lever drives shareholder returns.
  • Trend Analysis: A single ratio snapshot is less useful than watching the same ratio over 3–5 periods — improving or deteriorating trends reveal management quality and business momentum.

Final Thoughts

Balance sheet ratios are the financial analyst’s lens for seeing beyond revenue and profit figures. Liquidity ratios reveal short-term survival capacity. Solvency ratios expose structural debt risk. Efficiency ratios show how hard assets are working. Leverage ratios reveal the risk embedded in the capital structure. Used together — and benchmarked against industry peers — they provide the most complete picture of financial health available from a single financial statement.

Use our free Balance Sheet Calculator to compute all key ratios in one place — liquidity, solvency, efficiency, and leverage metrics simultaneously from your balance sheet inputs.

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