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Accounts Receivable Turnover

Term in Qoyod's Accounting Glossary — Practical definition with examples from the Saudi market.

What is Accounts Receivable Turnover?

Accounts receivable turnover is an efficiency ratio that measures how many times a business collects its average receivables balance during a period. A higher ratio indicates faster collection and tighter credit control; a lower ratio suggests slow collection and possible bad debt risk.

How It Works

  • Calculate net credit sales for the period.
  • Determine average accounts receivable (opening + closing balance / 2).
  • Divide net credit sales by average accounts receivable to get the turnover ratio.
  • Convert to days sales outstanding (DSO) by dividing 365 by the turnover ratio.

Saudi Context

Saudi B2B sellers monitor AR turnover and DSO as a core KPI. ZATCA’s bad debt relief allows VAT recovery on receivables uncollected after 12 months, so collection performance directly affects VAT cash flow. Tadawul-listed companies disclose DSO trends in their MD&A.

Example

A Saudi distributor has SAR 24 million credit sales and an average AR of SAR 4 million. AR turnover is 6 times, equivalent to DSO of about 61 days. Reducing DSO to 45 days would free roughly SAR 1 million in working capital.

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