Private withdrawal refers in accounting to the process by which an entrepreneur or partner withdraws assets (cash, goods, services) from the business assets for private purposes. These withdrawals reduce the business assets or equity, but do not constitute business expenses in the tax-law sense.

For freelancers and sole proprietors as well as for partnerships (e.g., GbR, OHG), private withdrawals are part of normal payment transactions. Commercial law (HGB) and tax law (in particular EStG and UStG) clearly distinguish between withdrawals and business expenses:

Accounting recognition and typical journal entries

Private withdrawals are recorded in double-entry bookkeeping on a private account or drawings account (contra equity). The aim is a clear separation between business and private assets.

Typical journal entries

At year-end the balance of the private account is closed against the equity account, which changes the reported equity.

VAT and income tax implications

Two tax aspects are particularly relevant:

For goods withdrawals an input tax correction may also be necessary if input VAT was claimed when the goods were acquired. Keep all supporting documents and document the withdrawal value in a verifiable way.

Practical tips and examples for everyday business

Practical handling and documentation are central to avoid inquiries from the tax office:

Specific examples

Risks and measures to avoid problems

Unclear or insufficiently documented withdrawals often trigger tax audits. The following measures reduce risks:

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Glossary Questions
What is an owner's withdrawal?

An owner's withdrawal occurs when the business owner removes business assets for private use (e.g., cash, goods, or equipment). It reduces equity or the owner's capital account, is not a business expense, and does not directly affect taxable profit.

How must private withdrawals be recorded in the accounting records?

With a cash-basis (income–expense) accounting you record withdrawals separately in the private account; in double-entry bookkeeping you post them to a withdrawals account (e.g. Owner’s withdrawals) and reduce bank, cash or inventory. It is important to keep complete documentation with the amount and date.

Are private withdrawals subject to VAT?

Withdrawals of goods or services are generally treated as a non‑remunerated supply (a deemed transfer of value) and can be subject to VAT (VAT is due on the withdrawal value). There are exceptions, for example if the small‑business scheme (Kleinunternehmerregelung) applies. Cash withdrawals themselves are not subject to VAT.

Do private withdrawals affect the taxable profit?

Private withdrawals do not directly change profit, since they are not business expenses; however, they reduce the company’s equity and liquidity. The tax-relevant result remains the operating result before withdrawals.

Is there a difference between 'Privatentnahme' and 'Entnahme' in a GmbH?

Yes: In a GmbH, shareholders are not allowed to simply take company assets as a private withdrawal; cash outflows must occur via salary payments, loans, or profit distributions, which are treated separately for tax purposes. Unauthorized withdrawals can have corporate and tax-law consequences.

History
Publication date:
11/14/2025
Modification date:
11/15/2025
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