AR Glossary

What is AR Turnover Ratio?

AR Turnover Ratio measures how efficiently a company collects its accounts receivable — calculated as Net Credit Sales divided by Average Accounts Receivable.

AR Turnover Ratio Explained

Accounts Receivable Turnover Ratio measures how many times a company collects its average accounts receivable balance during a specific period. It is calculated by dividing net credit sales by average accounts receivable.

A higher ratio means faster collection. If your AR turnover ratio is 12, you collect your average receivables 12 times per year — roughly every 30 days. A ratio of 6 means you're collecting every 60 days, which signals slower payments and higher cash flow risk.

AR turnover ratio is the inverse of DSO and is particularly useful for comparing collection efficiency across companies of different sizes. While DSO is measured in days (intuitive for operations teams), AR turnover ratio is a pure efficiency metric favored by CFOs, lenders, and investors for financial analysis.

What You Need to Know About AR Turnover Ratio

How to Calculate AR Turnover Ratio

AR Turnover Ratio Formula
AR Turnover = Net Credit Sales ÷ Average Accounts Receivable

Average AR = (Beginning AR + Ending AR) / 2. Use the same time period for both numerator and denominator — annual sales with annual average AR, or quarterly sales with quarterly average AR.

AR Turnover Ratio in Practice: B2B Example

Scenario: Software Services Company, Annual

Net Credit Sales (annual): $6,000,000

Beginning AR: $450,000

Ending AR: $550,000

Average AR: ($450,000 + $550,000) / 2 = $500,000

AR Turnover Ratio: $6,000,000 / $500,000 = 12.0 — excellent

Equivalent DSO: 365 / 12 = 30.4 days

Next year: Revenue grows to $7.2M but ending AR balloons to $900K (average AR = $675K). New ratio: 10.7. DSO jumps to 34 days. Revenue grew 20% but collections slowed — a sign that the company is extending credit to riskier customers or follow-up has lapsed.

What Is a Good AR Turnover Ratio?

12+
Excellent
Collecting every ~30 days. Strong cash flow management.
8-12
Average
Collecting every 30-45 days. Industry standard for most B2B.
Below 6
Warning Sign
Collecting every 60+ days. Significant cash tied up in receivables.

How AgentCollect Improves Your AR Turnover

Turn Receivables Into Cash Faster

AgentCollect AI agents accelerate collection velocity by contacting overdue accounts immediately and persistently. Faster collections mean lower average AR, which directly increases your turnover ratio.

Clients using AgentCollect typically improve their AR turnover ratio by 25-40% within the first two quarters — moving from the "average" to "excellent" range. That improvement means more cash on hand, better borrowing terms, and stronger financial metrics for investors and lenders.

Related AR Glossary Terms

AR Turnover Ratio FAQ

What is a good AR turnover ratio?
A good AR turnover ratio for B2B companies is typically 8-12, meaning the company collects its average receivables 8-12 times per year (roughly every 30-45 days). A ratio above 12 is excellent. Below 6 indicates slow collections and potential cash flow issues. The ideal ratio varies by industry and payment terms.
How do you calculate AR turnover ratio?
AR Turnover Ratio = Net Credit Sales / Average Accounts Receivable. Average AR is calculated as (Beginning AR + Ending AR) / 2. For example, if annual net credit sales are $6M and average AR is $500K, the ratio is 12 — meaning you collect your average AR 12 times per year.
What is the difference between AR turnover ratio and DSO?
They measure the same thing from different angles. AR Turnover Ratio tells you how many times per year you collect your average AR (higher is better). DSO tells you the average number of days to collect (lower is better). You can convert between them: DSO = 365 / AR Turnover Ratio. A ratio of 12 equals a DSO of about 30 days.

Want a higher AR turnover ratio?

AgentCollect AI agents improve turnover by 25-40% within two quarters. Success-only fees — you pay nothing unless we collect.

Start a free pilot →