What does LTL mean in Accounting?
This page is about the meanings of the acronym/abbreviation/shorthand LTL in the Business field in general and in the Accounting terminology in particular.
Long-Term Liabilities
Submitted by VanThai on August 2, 2021
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Definition
What does LTL mean?
- Long-term liabilities
- Long-term liabilities, or non-current liabilities, are liabilities that are due beyond a year or the normal operation period of the company. The normal operation period is the amount of time it takes for a company to turn inventory into cash. On a classified balance sheet, liabilities are separated between current and long-term liabilities to help users assess the company's financial standing in short-term and long-term periods. Long-term liabilities give users more information about the long-term prosperity of the company, while current liabilities inform the user of debt that the company owes in the current period. On a balance sheet, accounts are listed in order of liquidity, so long-term liabilities come after current liabilities. In addition, the specific long-term liability accounts are listed on the balance sheet in order of liquidity. Therefore, an account due within eighteen months would be listed before an account due within twenty-four months. Examples of long-term liabilities are bonds payable, long-term loans, capital leases, pension liabilities, post-retirement healthcare liabilities, deferred compensation, deferred revenues, deferred income taxes, and derivative liabilities.
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"LTL." Abbreviations.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2025. Web. 30 Jan. 2025. <https://www.abbreviations.com/term/2595591>.
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