⏱️ What is the Payback Period?
Definition: The payback period is the length of time it takes for an investment to generate enough cash inflows to recover (pay back) the initial cost.
It answers a simple question: how long before I get my money back? Shorter payback = lower risk.
Example: A machine costs $30,000. It generates $10,000 per year in net cash flow. Payback period = $30,000 ÷ $10,000 = 3 years
Payback is the simplest investment appraisal method — quick to calculate and easy to understand! 🎯
🔢 Payback with Uneven Cash Flows
When cash flows are NOT the same each year, you need to use the cumulative cash flow method.
Example: Machine costs $50,000
Year 1: $15,000 → Cumulative: $15,000 Year 2: $20,000 → Cumulative: $35,000 Year 3: $25,000 → Cumulative: $60,000
Payback happens during Year 3. Still needed at start of Year 3: $50,000 − $35,000 = $15,000 Year 3 cash flow: $25,000
Payback = 2 years + ($15,000 ÷ $25,000) × 12 months = 2 years and 7.2 months
Always show the cumulative column in your working — it makes it easy to spot when payback occurs and earns you method marks! ✍️
Know your predicted grade
Take timed mock exams and get detailed feedback on every answer. See exactly where you're losing marks.
Try Mock Exams Free7-day free trial • No card required
⚖️ Advantages & Disadvantages
Advantages
- Simple to calculate and easy to understand
- Focuses on cash flow — important for businesses with limited funds
- Useful for comparing projects — shorter payback = lower risk
- Good for fast-changing industries where long-term predictions are uncertain
Disadvantages
- Ignores cash flows AFTER the payback point — a project might generate huge returns later
- Ignores the time value of money — $1 today is worth more than $1 next year
- Doesn't measure total profitability — only how quickly money comes back
- May reject long-term investments that would be very profitable overall
🎯 When to Use Payback
Payback is most useful in specific situations:
- Businesses with tight cash flow that need their money back quickly
- Industries with rapid technological change (equipment becomes obsolete fast)
- Start-ups with limited access to finance
- As a quick screening tool before doing more detailed analysis
Payback is a good STARTING point but should rarely be the ONLY method used. Smart businesses combine it with ARR or other methods for a complete picture! 🧩