Paid-In Capital: Definition, Calculation, and Key Points
Definition
Paid-in capital (also called contributed capital) is the total cash or other assets a company receives from investors in exchange for its common or preferred stock. On the balance sheet it appears in shareholders’ equity and typically comprises:
– The par (or stated) value of the issued shares, and
– Any amount paid in excess of par value (additional paid-in capital).
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Paid-in capital represents funds raised through equity issuance, not earnings from operations.
Key takeaways
- Paid-in capital = par value of issued shares + amounts paid in excess of par.
- Additional paid-in capital refers only to the excess over par.
- It is reported in the shareholders’ equity section of the balance sheet.
- Paid-in capital is normally stable (except when shares are retired or treasury stock transactions occur) and can support a company before it generates earnings.
How it works
- Par value is usually a token amount (e.g., a few cents) for common stock; therefore, additional paid-in capital often represents most of the proceeds from an equity issuance.
- When shares are sold, the company records an increase in cash and corresponding credits to common/preferred stock (at par) and to additional paid-in capital (for the excess).
- Paid-in capital is not affected by day-to-day market price fluctuations of the company’s shares once issued.
Example and journal entry
Company issues 2,000 common shares, par value $2, sold at $20 each.
– Cash received = 2,000 × $20 = $40,000
– Common stock (par) = 2,000 × $2 = $4,000
– Additional paid-in capital = $40,000 − $4,000 = $36,000
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Typical journal entry:
– Debit Cash $40,000
– Credit Common Stock $4,000
– Credit Additional Paid-In Capital $36,000
Types of stock and impacts on paid-in capital
- Common stock: Main source of paid-in capital; par value recorded as common stock and excess as additional paid-in capital.
- Preferred stock: Similar treatment but often has a higher par or stated value and different investor appeal (steady dividends, capital protection).
- Treasury stock: Shares repurchased by the company are recorded as treasury stock (a contra-equity account) and reduce total shareholders’ equity.
- If treasury shares are later reissued above the repurchase price, the gain is credited to “paid-in capital from treasury stock.”
- If reissued below repurchase price, the shortfall can reduce retained earnings.
- Retiring treasury shares permanently cancels them and can change paid-in capital depending on repurchase vs. original paid-in amounts.
Paid-in capital vs. other equity measures
- Additional Paid-In Capital: Only the amount received over par value.
- Common Stock: Reflects par value of issued common shares; a component of paid-in capital.
- Earned Capital (Retained Earnings): Accumulated profits from operations, separate from funds raised through equity issuance.
A startup often has high paid-in capital relative to earned capital; mature companies usually have higher earned capital.
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Recording and accounting treatment
- Location: Shareholders’ equity section of the balance sheet.
- Normal balance: Credit (increases paid-in capital and correspondingly increases cash on the debit side when shares are issued).
- Paid-up share capital refers to amounts the company has received for issued shares.
Why it matters
Paid-in capital shows how much investors have financially backed a company through stock purchases. It can provide liquidity for new projects and cushion losses before a company generates consistent operating profits. Investors and analysts use it, alongside retained earnings and other equity components, to assess capital structure and funding sources.
Bottom line
Paid-in capital is a core measure of investor-provided funding on the balance sheet. Understanding its components—par value, additional paid-in capital, and interactions with treasury stock—helps interpret a company’s financing history and equity strength.