bottom line
the final or most important point or result
What it means
The bottom line is the most important fact, conclusion, or financial result of a situation — the thing that ultimately matters once the details are stripped away. In business it specifically refers to net profit on a financial statement, but in everyday speech it means 'the key point' or 'the deciding factor.'
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Examples
- The bottom line is, we can't afford the trip this year.
- Higher costs hurt the company's bottom line last quarter.
- Forget the politics — what's the bottom line for our team?
- I respect his bottom-line approach: cut everything that doesn't work.
Where it comes from
From accounting and bookkeeping, where the final line of a profit-and-loss statement shows the net result — literally the bottom line of the document. The figurative use as 'the essential point' became common in American business English in the mid-20th century.
Related idioms
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