Trial Balance
Error of omission
A transaction has been been completely left out from bookkeeping meaning that no record was made and the trial balance will still balance
Error of principle
A transaction is recorded in the wrong type of account.For example, recording the purchase of a vehicle(assets) into the motor expenses account (Expense)
Error of commission
Correct Amount is posted to the correct type of account but the wrong account was used. for example, Posting a credit sale to B smith(Debtors) instead of D smith(Debtors.
Reversal of Entries
Correct amount recorded at the wrong side of the T account. for example, posting revenue on the debit side instead the credit.
Six errors that have an equivalent affect on both debit and credit totals on the trial balance
Error of omission Error of commission Error of principle Compensating errors Reversal of entries Error of original entry
Advantages of producing trial balance
Helps to identify key accounting information such as totals of key accounting data. e.g. money in the bank, purchases etc.
Advantages of producing trial balance
Helps to prepare the final accounts- income statements and balance sheet.
Advantages of producing trial balance
Helps to reveal errors.
Error of original entry
Incorrect amount entered on the source document. for example, if £50 was recorded in the purchase invoice rather than £500.
Compensating errors
Mistakes of equal value on both sides of the T accounts which will still make the Trial balance add up and balance
Advantages of producing trial balance
To check the arithmetical accuracy of the bookkeeping. if the total of Debits and credits are equal then we can be fairly confident of accuracy.
Disadvantages of producing trial balance
Trial balance cannot guarantee 100% accuracy of the bookkeeping.