
ACP represents the average number of days your business takes to collect receivables from customers after a sale. While closely related to DSO, ACP often uses slightly different data points in its calculation and focuses more specifically on the receivables collection process.
A lower collection period indicates efficient credit management and quicker collection of receivables. For B2B companies in industries with longer payment terms, like construction, logistics, or wholesale distribution, tracking ACP helps identify which customers consistently pay late and which collection strategies work best.
ACP = (Average Accounts Receivable ÷ Net Credit Sales) × Number of Days
Where:
Your oil and gas services company reports:
ACP = ($625,000 ÷ $2,500,000) × 365 = 91.25 days
This indicates you’re collecting payment approximately 91 days after invoicing. If your standard payment terms are net-60, this 91-day ACP signals a problem, as customers are paying about a month late on average, which strains your working capital.
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When you’re running a B2B operation, understanding how quickly customers pay their invoices directly impacts your ability to cover payroll, purchase inventory, and invest in growth. DSO measures the average number of days it takes for your company to collect payments after making a sale on credit.
Think of DSO as your company’s payment pulse. A lower DSO value reflects more cash on hand, while a higher DSO indicates slower credit sales to cash conversion. For commercial businesses dealing with net-30, net-60, or net-90 payment terms, DSO provides critical visibility into whether your customers are paying on time or your cash is stuck in accounts receivable.
DSO = (Average Accounts Receivable ÷ Net Credit Sales) × Number of Days
Where:
Let’s say your trucking company has $150,000 in accounts receivable at year-end and generated $1,500,000 in net credit sales:
DSO = ($150,000 ÷ $1,500,000) × 365 = 36.5 days
This means you’re collecting payment approximately 37 days after invoicing customers. A study by the Hackett Group found the median DSO is 43.5 days, while companies in the top 25% collect payments in just 25.1 days after issuing invoices. This means leading businesses access their cash over 18 days sooner than competitors, giving them a significant liquidity advantage.
While both metrics measure collection efficiency, understanding their nuances helps you choose the right tool for your specific analysis:
| Aspect | Average Collection Period (ACP) | Days Sales Outstanding (DSO) |
|---|---|---|
| Primary Focus | Receivables collection process efficiency | Sales-to-cash conversion timeline |
| Standard Formula | (Average AR ÷ Net Credit Sales) × Days | (AR ÷ Net Credit Sales) × Days |
| Data Points Used | Typically, average AR and net credit sales | Often end-period AR and total credit sales |
| Best Use Case | Internal performance tracking and improvement | Benchmarking against industry standards |
| Interpretation | Specific collection procedure effectiveness | Overall liquidity and cash flow health |
The practical reality? For most B2B commercial operations, these metrics generate similar insights. In the SaaS world and many B2B contexts, DSO and ACP are effectively the same.
The key is to pick one metric, track it consistently, and compare it against your industry benchmarks and historical performance.

Both ACP and DSO spotlight exactly how efficiently cash flows into your business. When either metric exceeds your payment terms, it’s a red flag that customer payments are slowing. This early warning system helps you address collection issues before they become cash flow crises.
For example, if you offer net-45 terms but your DSO sits at 75 days, your customers are taking an extra month to pay. That 30-day gap represents cash that could cover operational expenses or fund new opportunities.
Rising trends in either metric often indicate:
A lower DSO is almost always a good sign. Many companies target a DSO below 45 days to maintain healthy cash flow. However, your target should align with your specific industry.
Consulting and facilities management companies often operate with 90-day terms, while retail businesses typically see much shorter cycles. Manufacturing and distribution companies generally fall between 45–60 days.
Let’s examine two contractors to see how this metric works in practice:
Contractor A (Efficient Collections)
ACP/DSO: ($300,000 ÷ $3,000,000) × 365 = 36.5 days
This metric shows Contractor A collects payments quickly, well within typical net-45 terms. Customers are paying approximately 8 days early on average, indicating strong collection processes and healthy customer relationships.
Contractor B (Collection Challenges)
ACP/DSO: ($450,000 ÷ $2,000,000) × 365 = 82.1 days
Contractor B’s metric reveals significant collection problems, with customers paying on average 30–40 days late (assuming net-45 terms). This company needs immediate attention to its credit and collection processes, including reviewing customer creditworthiness, payment terms, and follow-up procedures.
Here are some strategies to improve your ACP & DSO:

At Southwest Recovery Services (SWRS), we specialize in helping B2B companies improve their collection metrics and strengthen cash flow through professional commercial debt recovery. With over 20 years of experience focused exclusively on B2B collections, we understand the unique challenges facing companies in trucking, logistics, construction, oil and gas, and wholesale distribution.
We operate on a pure contingency basis; you pay nothing upfront, no monthly retainers, and no fees unless we successfully recover your funds. Most commercial debt collection agencies charge contingency fees ranging from 10–25% of the amount successfully recovered, eliminating financial risk while aligning our success directly with yours.
Our AI-guided tracking systems monitor every account across all communication channels, ensuring no promise to pay falls through the cracks. Combined with daily founder involvement, we deliver the strategic oversight that automated systems alone cannot provide.
We understand that today’s delinquent customer might be tomorrow’s strong account once cash flow improves. Our veteran collectors use respectful, professional communication designed to recover funds while preserving business relationships.
With 12 offices across six states, we provide geographic reach for nationwide collections while maintaining the personalized attention your accounts deserve. Our compliance-first approach protects your business from legal risks while maximizing recovery rates.
When you place aged receivables with SWRS, you’re directly improving both your ACP and DSO. By converting uncollectible accounts into cash, we reduce your outstanding receivables balance, which immediately improves your metrics.
There is no substantive difference between ACP and DSO, as they are synonymous terms measuring how many days it takes to collect receivables.
The difference lies purely in context: DSO is often used in investor reports that focus on sales efficiency, while ACP appears more frequently in accounting contexts that emphasize collection policy effectiveness. Regardless of which term is used, lower values (typically under 45 days) indicate strong collection performance.
A “good” DSO or ACP varies by industry, with the overall median being 56 days in 2024. Traditional industries such as consulting and facilities management often operate on 90-day terms, whereas retail has much shorter collection cycles.
The best approach is to benchmark against your industry-specific standards while monitoring your own trends. A rising DSO/ACP signals deteriorating collection performance, while a declining trend indicates improving efficiency in converting sales to cash.
High DSO means it’s taking longer than expected to collect payment after a sale, which strains working capital, reduces available cash for operations and growth initiatives, and may signal customer credit concerns or inefficient collection processes.
When cash is tied up in receivables, you may struggle to meet payroll, pay suppliers on time, or take advantage of business opportunities.
Yes, professional collection agencies like Southwest Recovery Services directly improve both ACP and DSO by recovering aged receivables that internal efforts couldn’t collect.
When an agency successfully recovers a 120-day-old invoice, it removes that balance from your accounts receivable, immediately improving your metric calculations. The contingency model means you only pay when a successful recovery occurs, making it a risk-free way to optimize your collection metrics.
*Note: Recovery rates mentioned are for general reference only and not guaranteed. Actual results vary by account and industry. Contact Southwest Recovery Services for a customized quote.
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