Which account is credited when cash is received on account by a business?

According to the double entry system of bookkeeping, there are three types of accounts that help you to maintain an error-free record of your journal entries. Each account type has a rule to identify its debit and credit aspect called as the Golden Rule of Accounting. The accounts are:

  • Personal Accounts
  • Real Accounts
  • Nominal Accounts

Personal Accounts

Ledger accounts that contain transactions related to individuals or other organizations with whom your business has direct transactions are known as personal accounts. Some examples of personal accounts are customers, vendors, salary accounts of employees, drawings and capital accounts of owners, etc.

The golden rule for personal accounts is: debit the receiver and credit the giver.

Example: Payment of salary to employees

In this example, the receiver is an employee and the giver will be the business. Hence, in the journal entry, the Employee’s Salary account will be debited and the Cash / Bank account will be credited.

Real Accounts

The ledger accounts which contain transactions related to the assets or liabilities of the business are called Real accounts. Accounts of both tangible and intangible nature fall under this category of accounts, i.e. Machinery, Buildings, Goodwill, Patent rights, etc. These account balances do not come to zero at the end of the financial year unless there is a sale of the asset or payment made towards a liability or closure or acquisition of the business. These accounts appear in the Balance Sheet and the balances get carried forward to the next financial year.

The golden rule for real accounts is: debit what comes in and credit what goes out.

Example: Payment made for a loan

In this transaction, cash goes out and the loan is settled. Hence, in the journal entry, the Loan account will be debited and the Bank account will be credited.

Nominal Accounts

Transactions related to income, expense, profit and loss are recorded under this category. These components actually do not exist in any physical form but they actually exist. For example, during the purchase and sale of goods, only two components directly get affected i.e money and stock. But, apart from this we may incur profit or loss out of such transactions and we might incur some expenses for these transactions to happen. These secondary components fall under the Nominal Category and the accounts that are in Profit and Loss statement are shown under this category.

The golden rule for nominal accounts is: debit all expenses and losses and credit all income and gains.

Example of Nominal Account: Shipping Charges account and Salary account.


In the above example, if the general ledger cash account does not show a balance of $3,851.26, you must track down the cause of the difference.

If your bank reconciliation doesn't balance, you need to find the error or errors. The possible causes of a bank balance error comprise:

  • Total outstanding checks added incorrectly. Double check your addition of the total outstanding checks.
  • Total deposits in transit added incorrectly. Double check your addition of deposits in transit.
  • Bank balance transposed. Did you start with the correct amount at the top of your reconciliation? Double check by comparing it to the month end balance on your bank statement.
  • Failure to record all items clearing the bank statement. Look at your bank statement carefully. Are there any items, such as miscellaneous bank charges or automatic deposits or withdrawals that were not recorded in your books?
  • Journals added incorrectly. Double check your addition of cash receipts and cash disbursements.
  • Failed to record a check or deposit. Did you record all checks and deposits in your journals? This should have been apparent when you were preparing your lists of deposits in transit and outstanding checks.
  • Incorrectly recorded an amount. Compare each item on the bank statement with your journal entry for that item. Did you enter the correct amount?

Maintaining a cash disbursements journal

A cash disbursements journal is where you record your cash (or check) paid-out transactions. It can also go by a purchases journal or an expense journal.

While you may, if you search heard enough, find print cash disbursement journals, we strongly recommend keeping this journal on your computer or in the cloud, like you do with most of your financial journals. Your accounting software will probably include some type of disbursement and purchase journals customizable to your business needs.

Using accrual accounting and cash disbursement journals

If you use the accrual basis of accounting, as we recommend, you'll record expenses in the cash disbursement journal at the time you pay for goods or services, or in the purchase journal if you purchase on credit.

Accrual accounting example

You own a variety store. You purchase from your main supplier, on account, items totaling $7,800. Most of the purchase is inventory for resale, but also included are $100 of office supplies. Make the following entry in your purchases journal:

Next month, after receiving a statement from your supplier, you write a check to settle your account. Make the following entry in your purchases journal:

Cash disbursements journal examples

If your business is a retail store, your journal entries might look something like this:

(Note: All dollar amounts have been rounded off to the nearest dollar.)

  • On February 2, you paid your electric bill of $177.
  • Also on February 2, you bought merchandise inventory on account from Ash Wholesale at a cost of $9,500.
  • On February 5, you spent $82 at Atkins Service Station to fill up your delivery vehicles with gas. You charge it all to the account you maintain with Atkins.
  • On February 8, you write a check for $9,500 in payment of the bill you receive from Ash.
  • On February 10, you write a check for $82 to Atkins Service Station to settle your account there.
  • Upon completion of this journal page, you should foot all seven amount columns. Since you are using a double-entry accounting system, you can see if all entries were recorded correctly. Check to see if the sum of the debits equals the sum of the credits. Total debits: 0 + 9,582 + 9500 + 82 + 177 = 19,341. Total credits: 9,759 + 9,582 = 19,341.

If the sum of the debit columns doesn't equal the sum of the credit columns, you have a problem that you should track down right away. You may have entered one of the amounts in the wrong column. You might have simply added incorrectly when computing the totals. It is usually easy to pinpoint the error because the debits should equal the credits for each transaction.

Your purchases journal may have many more columns than this sample because you probably will have more expense classifications.

Maintaining a petty cash fund and dealing with accounts receivable

Nearly all businesses need some cash on hand to pay small, miscellaneous expenses. The easiest way to keep this money available is through a petty cash fund, unless, your business has cash on hand from daily transactions.

If you are use cash from the day's receipts for small expenses, must sure to accurately record all cash taken from the cash register and prepare a cash sheet at the end of the day to help control cash paid out of the register.

Steps for creating a petty cash fund

  1. Start a petty cash fund by writing a check to "Petty Cash." Cash the check.
  2. Physically place the cash in a petty cash drawer or petty cash box.
  3. As you pay for expenses out of petty cash, keep an itemized list of each expenditure.
  4. When the cash is almost depleted, add up the expenses on your itemized list.
  5. Write another check to "Petty Cash" for the total of the expenses. That check should replenish the fund back to the initial balance.

How to use a petty cash fund

Let's assume you decide to set up a petty cash fund to pay small expenses that you don't pay by check or debit card. You feel a petty cash fund of $100 is necessary, so you write a $100 check payable to "Petty Cash." You physically place the $100 in a petty cash box. Make the following entry in your cash disbursements journal:

         Debit      Credit
Petty cash      100
Cash
100

Two weeks later, you review the petty cash box and find $25.00 left. You add the items listed on the expenditures list, and you are happy to find that they add up to $75.00 (25 + 75 = 100). You write a check, payable to "Petty Cash," for $75.00. The cash is placed in the petty cash box. This replenishes the fund back to $100. Using the list of petty cash expenditures as your source document, make the following entry in your cash disbursements journal:


     Debit      Credit
Office supplies      13.20
Auto expenses      39.00
Misc. labor      15.00
Misc. expenses        7.80
Cash
     75.00

The petty cash drawer or box should be locked when not in use. Only one person should have access to the petty cash, so that one person is held accountable for it.

Understanding accounts receivable

Accounts receivable (often abbreviated A/R) are simply unpaid customer invoices and any other money owed to you by your customers. The sum of all your customer accounts receivable is listed as a current asset on your balance sheet.

Your accounting software should automatically keep an accounts receivable ledger account for each customer. The accounts receivable ledger, which can also double as a customer statement, serves as a record of each customer's charges and payments.

Maintaining accounts receivable records

When a customer purchases something, you'll want to:

  1. Record the sale in the sales and cash receipts journal. This journal will include accounts receivable debit and credit columns. Charge sales and payments on account are entered in these two columns, respectively.
  2. Each day, the credit sales recorded in the sales and cash receipts journal are posted to the appropriate customer's accounts in the accounts receivable ledger. This allows you to know not only the total amount owed to you by all credit customers, but also the total amount owed by each customer.
  3. Entries made in the sales and cash receipts journal are also totaled at the end of the month, and the results are posted to the accounts receivable account in your general ledger. This account is your accounts receivable "control account." "Control" means is that after all your posting is completed, the total amount of customer balances in the accounts receivable ledger will be the same as the balance in the control account in the general ledger. If they aren't the same, you can tell that you made an error somewhere along the line.

If you extend credit to your customers and maintain a sales and cash receipts journal by hand, ensure your accounting software integrates posting to the accounts receivable ledgers with the recording of sales and cash receipts transactions automatically. Referred to as the "one-write" system, this time-saver also reduces the chance of posting errors.

Keeping an accounts receivable ledger

You must maintain an accounts receivable ledger account for each customer you extend credit to. Post your sales invoice charges from the sales and cash receipts journal to the customer ledgers at the end of each day. Also, whether you use a cash register or a separate cash receipts book, be sure to post cash receipts on account to the appropriate ledgers at the end of the day. Of course, your software should be able to take care of this automatically.

If you like a paper trail, keep all your accounts receivable ledgers in one binder and let the copies of the accounts receivable ledgers also serve as the statements you mail to your customers in request for payment. If you mail them out as statements, begin a new ledger sheet every month.

The monthly ledger sheet should start with a balance forward, which is the ending balance from the previous month. If your ledger sheets will not be doubling as your customer statements, you don't need to start a new sheet every month. Just keep a permanent ledger for each customer that maintains a running total of the customer balance.

For most businesses, statements should be sent once a month to all customers with an account balance and include:

  • a beginning balance (the previous month's ending balance)
  • all invoices charged during the month
  • payments on account during the month
  • any debit memos or credit memos
  • an ending balance
  • a due date

Keeping track of your control account

When you mail statements to your customers every month, you should reconcile your accounts receivable ledgers with the accounts receivable control account. The control account is the total accounts receivable balance from your general ledger.

 The beginning accounts receivable total, plus charge sales for the month, minus payments on account for the month, should equal the ending accounts receivable total. Compare this amount to the sum of the individual customer accounts receivable ledgers. This will help you discover any errors in your customer statements before you mail them out. Your accounting software should notify you of discrepancies automatically.

Handling your accounts payable

Accounts receivable can be a little fun—after all, it's all about raking in your hard-earned dough. Accounts payable (often called A/P), on the other hand, focuses on the unpaid bills of the business—that is, the money you owe your suppliers and other creditors. The sum of the amounts you owe to your suppliers is listed as a current liability on your balance sheet.

Preparing your accounts payable paperwork

If you use the accrual basis of accounting, as we recommend, expenses are recorded in the cash disbursements journal at the time the goods or services are paid for or in the purchase journal if you buy on credit. If you deal with a given supplier many times during the month, you don't have to record every purchase. You could accumulate all bills for the month from that supplier, then record one transaction in the purchases journal at the end of the month.

You should keep an accounts payable ledger account for each supplier. Expenses from the cash disbursements journal are, at the end of each day, posted to the appropriate accounts payable ledger. The accounts payable ledger is a record of what you owe each vendor. Ensure your accounting software automatically keeps separate ledgers as well as the general ledger.

The general ledger contains an accounts payable account, which is your accounts payable control account. The cash disbursements journal has accounts payable credit and debit columns. Credit purchases and payments on account are entered in these two columns, respectively. At the end of the month they are totaled and posted to the control account in the general ledger.

Keeping up with your A/P ledgers

Accounts payable ledgers will help you control your expenditures and payables. If you maintain accurate payable ledgers, it will be easy for you to double check the bills you get from your suppliers.

At the end of the month, reconcile your accounts payable ledgers with the accounts payable control account. The control account is the total accounts payable balance from your general ledger. The beginning accounts payable total, plus purchases on account during the month, minus payments on account during the month, should equal the ending accounts payable total. Compare this amount to the sum of the individual accounts payable ledgers. This will help you discover any errors you made in recording your payables. A reconciliation might also help you catch any errors on vendor bills.

An accounts payable aging report is a good cash management tool that should be prepared periodically. It will help you plan the timing and amount of your cash disbursements.

What accounts are debited and credited when cash is received on account?

Debits and Credits in Common Accounting Transactions Receive cash in payment of an account receivable: Debit the cash account | Credit the accounts receivable account. Purchase supplies from supplier for cash: Debit the supplies expense account | Credit the cash account.

What happens when cash is received on account?

A company that receives cash on an account, which is known as a debit, applies that cash to pay down the account receivable. Payments out of an account or services rendered before payment are considered credits.

When a business pays cash on account?

Acct Ch 3 Test Review 2 of 2.

When a company receives cash the cash account is debited?

Since Cash is an asset account, its normal or expected balance is a debit balance. Therefore, the Cash account is debited to increase its balance. In the first transaction, we assumed that the corporation was started by investors providing $20,000 of cash for new shares of the corporation's common stock.