Financial Accounting 04
Closing Entries, step 2: Close the expense accounts to the Income Summary account.
- DR Income Summary; CR Expense accounts
Closing Entries, step 4: Close Dividends to Retained Earnings
- DR Retained Earnings; CR Dividends
Closing Entries, step 3: Close the Income Summary account to Retained Earnings.
- If Net Loss: DR Retained Earnings; CR Income Summary - If Net Income: DR Income Summary; CR Retained Earnings
Closing Entries, step 1: Close the revenue accounts to the Income Summary account.
-DR revenue; CR Income Summary
Steps in Accounting Cycle
1. Analyze business transactions. 2. Journalize the transactions. 3. Post to ledger accounts. 4. Prepare a trial balance. 5. Journalize and post adjusting entries--deferrals and accruals. 6. Prepare an adjusted trial balance. 7. Prepare financial statements: ○ Income statement ○ Retained earnings statement ○ Balance sheet 8. Journalize and post closing entries. 9. Prepare post-closing trial balance.
Closing entries posting steps
1. Close the revenue accounts to the Income Summary account. 2. Close the expense accounts to the Income Summary account. 3. Close the Income Summary account to Retained Earnings. 4. Close Dividends to Retained Earnings.
Adjusted trial balance
A list of accounts and their balances after all adjustments have been made.
Post-closing trial balance
A list of permanent accounts and their balances after a company has journalized and posted closing entries.
Worksheet
A multiple-column form that companies may use in the adjustment process and in preparing financial statements.
Income Summary
A temporary account used in closing revenue and expense accounts.
Cash-basis accounting
Accounting basis in which a company records revenue only when it receives cash, and an expense only when it pays cash.
Accrual-basis accounting
Accounting basis in which companies record, in the periods in which the events occur, transactions that change a company's financial statements, even if cash was not exchanged.
Contra asset account
An account that is offset against an asset account on the balance sheet.
Fiscal year
An accounting period that is one year long.
Time period assumption
An assumption that the economic life of a business can be divided into artificial time periods.
Reversing entry
An entry made at the beginning of the next accounting period; the exact opposite of the adjusting entry made in the previous period.
Prepaid expenses (Prepayments)
Assets that result from the payment of expenses that benefit more than one accounting period.
Permanent accounts
Balance sheet accounts whose balances are carried forward to the next accounting period.
Unearned revenues
Cash received before a company earns revenues and recorded as a liability until earned.
Accrued revenues Adjusting Entry
Dr. Assets Cr. Revenues
Depreciation expense Adjusting Entry
Dr. Depreciation Expense Cr. Accumulated Depreciation
Prepaid Expense Adjusting Entry
Dr. Expenses Cr. Assets
Accrued expenses Adjusting Entry
Dr. Expenses Cr. Liabilities
Unearned Revenues Adjusting Entry
Dr. Liabilities Cr. Revenues
Closing entries
Entries at the end of an accounting period to transfer the balances of temporary accounts to a permanent stockholders' equity account, Retained Earnings.
Adjusting entries
Entries made at the end of an accounting period to ensure that the revenue recognition and matching principles are followed.
Accrued expenses
Expenses incurred but not yet paid in cash or recorded.
Quality of earnings
Indicates the level of full and transparent information that a company provides to users of its financial statements.
Temporary accounts
Revenue, expense, and dividend accounts whose balances a company transfers to Retained Earnings at the end of an accounting period.
Accrued revenues
Revenues earned but not yet received in cash or recorded.
Book value
The difference between the cost of a depreciable asset and its related accumulated depreciation.
Useful life
The length of service of a productive asset.
Earnings management
The planned timing of revenues, expenses, gains, and losses to smooth out bumps in net income.
Revenue recognition principle
The principle that companies recognize revenue in the accounting period in which it is earned.
Matching principle
The principle that dictates that companies match efforts (expenses) with accomplishments (revenues).
Depreciation
The process of allocating the cost of an asset to expense over its useful life.
List of temporary accounts
all revenue all expense Dividends Income Summary