Quick Ratio
What is Quick Ratio
The Quick Ratio, also known as the acid-test ratio, measures a company's ability to meet its short-term obligations using its most liquid assets, which are Cash and Equivalents, Marketable Securities, and Accounts Receivable, by dividing these assets by Current Liabilities.
The Quick Ratio, also known as the acid-test ratio, measures a company's ability to meet its short-term obligations using its most liquid assets. It is constructed by dividing the sum of a company's cash and equivalents, marketable securities, and accounts receivable by its current liabilities. A higher Quick Ratio generally indicates that a company has a greater ability to pay its short-term debts, while a lower ratio may signal that a company could struggle to meet its obligations. The specific components included in the Quick Ratio can vary, which may result in different calculations and interpretations of a company's liquidity position.
How to calculate it
Formula
Quick Ratio = (Cash and Equivalents + Marketable Securities + Accounts Receivable) / Current Liabilities
Example
Example frame: Quick Ratio rises when the numerator increases relative to the denominator, and falls when the denominator improves relative to the numerator. Open the live stock page.
Alternative Definitions
The quick ratio is also called the acid-test ratio, and definitions vary on which near-cash assets are included, resulting in different calculations depending on the specific assets considered near-cash.
Benchmarks
The Quick Ratio (QR) can vary significantly by sector or business model due to differences in cash conversion cycles and working capital requirements. To contextualize a company's QR, investors can compare it to the live S&P 500 benchmark and sector medians, which can provide insight into the company's liquidity position relative to its peers and the broader market.
Sector comparison
| Sector | Median Quick Ratio | As of |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 | 0.98 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Technology | 1.27 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Basic Materials | 1.19 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Communication Services | 1.14 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Healthcare | 1.13 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Industrials | 1 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Consumer Cyclical | 0.94 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Financial Services | 0.92 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Energy | 0.85 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Utilities | 0.65 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Consumer Defensive | 0.63 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Real Estate | 0.49 | Jul 9, 2026 |
Universe distribution
Chart view is trimmed to the 5th-95th percentile for readability.
Interpretation
How to read it
- Check whether accounts receivable are actually collectible by cross-referencing the allowance for doubtful accounts in the notes to the financial statements, since the quick ratio includes receivables at face value but some may never convert to cash.
- A quick ratio materially lower than the current ratio signals that inventory makes up a large portion of current assets, which matters because inventory cannot be spent immediately to cover obligations.
- The metric becomes less meaningful for businesses with negative cash conversion cycles or those that collect payment before paying suppliers, as their liquidity position may be stronger than the ratio alone suggests.
- Seasonal businesses often show volatile quick ratios across quarters, so compare the same quarter year-over-year rather than comparing consecutive quarters to avoid misinterpreting temporary working capital swings.
High vs low
A high Quick Ratio signals that a company holds sufficient liquid assets to cover its current liabilities without relying on inventory sales. This indicates stronger short-term financial flexibility. A low Quick Ratio suggests potential difficulty meeting near-term obligations and may warrant scrutiny of the company's cash position and receivables quality. However, interpretation depends on context: a temporarily low ratio during heavy capital investment or seasonal cash cycles may not signal distress, while a high ratio in a capital-intensive industry might reflect underdeployed assets. Comparing the Quick Ratio to the Current Ratio helps distinguish whether inventory is masking liquidity weakness. Trend analysis and peer comparison clarify whether the ratio reflects genuine solvency risk or normal business operations.
Reference
Extremes
- Interactive Brokers Group, Inc. (IBKR)Financial Services16,927.9Quick Ratio
- Citizens Financial Group, Inc. (CFG)Financial Services228.3Quick Ratio
- MetLife, Inc. (MET)Financial Services85.01Quick Ratio
- The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. (GS)Financial Services0.02Quick Ratio
- Equity Residential (EQR)Real Estate0.03Quick Ratio
- Mid-America Apartment Communities, Inc. (MAA)Real Estate0.05Quick Ratio
| Group | Company | Ticker | Sector | Quick Ratio | As of |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Highest | Interactive Brokers Group, Inc. | IBKR | Financial Services | 16,927.9 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Highest | Citizens Financial Group, Inc. | CFG | Financial Services | 228.3 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Highest | MetLife, Inc. | MET | Financial Services | 85.01 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Lowest | The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc. | GS | Financial Services | 0.02 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Lowest | Equity Residential | EQR | Real Estate | 0.03 | Jul 9, 2026 |
| Lowest | Mid-America Apartment Communities, Inc. | MAA | Real Estate | 0.05 | Jul 9, 2026 |
Limitations
The Quick Ratio, also known as the acid-test ratio, has several limitations that can affect its accuracy as a liquidity metric.
- Quick ratio excludes inventory by design, so it may not reflect true liquidity for businesses where inventory converts to cash rapidly or represents a material portion of working capital.
- The metric treats all receivables as equally liquid, even though collection risk and aging vary significantly across customers and industries.
- Quick ratio does not account for access to credit lines, revolving facilities, or other off-balance-sheet liquidity sources that may be available in a cash crunch.
- A single point-in-time quick ratio can mask seasonal swings in cash, receivables, and payables that occur throughout the year.
Related concepts
FAQ
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