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Current Assets

Income taxes receivable

Raymond James Financial Income taxes receivable increased by 182.1% to $79M in Q3 2025 compared to the prior quarter. Year-over-year, this metric grew by 182.1%, from $28M to $79M. Over 5 years (FY 2020 to FY 2025), Income taxes receivable shows an upward trend with a 36.0% CAGR. This is a positive signal — higher values indicate stronger performance for this metric.

Analysis

StatementBalance Sheet Statement
SectionCurrent Assets
CategoryLiquidity
SignalHigher is better
VolatilityModerate
First reportedQ4 2015
Last reportedQ4 2025Nov 25, 2025

How to read this metric

An increase may indicate temporary overpayment or the realization of tax credits, while a decrease suggests the settlement of these claims.

Detailed definition

This represents the amount of income tax overpayments or refundable tax credits due to the company from taxing authoriti...

Peer comparison

Standard current asset for most corporations; peers report this on the balance sheet under current assets.

Metric ID: income_taxes_receivable

Historical Data

5 periods
 Q4 '21Q4 '22Q4 '23Q4 '24Q4 '25
Value$12M$7M$9M$28M$79M
QoQ Change-41.7%+28.6%+211.1%+182.1%
YoY Change-41.7%+28.6%+211.1%+182.1%
Range$7M$79M
CAGR+558.3%
Avg YoY Growth+95.0%
Median YoY Growth+105.4%
Current Streak3 quarters growth

Income taxes receivable at Other Companies

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Raymond James Financial's income taxes receivable?
Raymond James Financial (RJF) reported income taxes receivable of $79M in Q3 2025.
How has Raymond James Financial's income taxes receivable changed year-over-year?
Raymond James Financial's income taxes receivable increased by 182.1% year-over-year, from $28M to $79M.
What is the long-term trend for Raymond James Financial's income taxes receivable?
Over 5 years (2020 to 2025), Raymond James Financial's income taxes receivable has grown at a 36.0% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from $17M to $79M.
What does income taxes receivable mean?
Cash owed to the company by tax authorities due to overpayment or tax credits.