Non-Current Assets

Allowance for credit losses

Tyson Foods Allowance for credit losses increased by 22.3% to $504.00M in Q3 2025 compared to the prior quarter. Year-over-year, this metric grew by 22.3%, from $412.00M to $504.00M. Over 4 years (FY 2021 to FY 2025), Allowance for credit losses shows relatively stable performance with a -2.5% CAGR. This increase may warrant attention — for this metric, lower values are generally preferred.

Analysis

StatementBalance Sheet Statement
SectionNon-Current Assets
CategoryRisk
SignalLower is better
VolatilityModerate
First reportedQ4 2023
Last reportedQ4 2025
Parent metricNet loans

How to read this metric

An increase suggests higher expected defaults or a more conservative risk assessment, while a decrease suggests improved borrower creditworthiness.

Detailed definition

A contra-asset account representing the estimated amount of uncollectible loans and receivables within the company's len...

Peer comparison

Standard for financial institutions; peers with higher-risk loan portfolios will typically maintain higher allowance ratios.

Metric ID: bank_allowance_for_credit_losses

Historical Data

5 periods
 Q3 '21Q3 '22Q3 '23Q3 '24Q3 '25
Value$558.00M$410.00M$400.00M$412.00M$504.00M
QoQ Change-26.5%-2.4%+3.0%+22.3%
YoY Change-26.5%-2.4%+3.0%+22.3%
Range$400.00M$558.00M
CAGR-9.7%
Avg YoY Growth-0.9%
Median YoY Growth+0.3%
Current Streak2 quarters growth

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Tyson Foods's allowance for credit losses?
Tyson Foods (TSN) reported allowance for credit losses of $504.00M in Q3 2025.
How has Tyson Foods's allowance for credit losses changed year-over-year?
Tyson Foods's allowance for credit losses increased by 22.3% year-over-year, from $412.00M to $504.00M.
What is the long-term trend for Tyson Foods's allowance for credit losses?
Over 4 years (2021 to 2025), Tyson Foods's allowance for credit losses has grown at a -2.5% compound annual growth rate (CAGR), from $558.00M to $504.00M.
What does allowance for credit losses mean?
The reserve set aside to cover potential losses from loans that may not be repaid.