Ch-2 FRONT OFFICE (ACCOUNTING)

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FRONT OFFICE ACCOUNTING

Front office accounting is actually grounded in straight forward logic and basic
math skills. A front office accounting system monitors and charts the
transactions of guest and businesses, agencies, and other non-guests using
the hotels services and facilities. The front offices ability to perform accounting
tasks in a perfect and complete manner will directly affect the hotels ability to
collect the hotels outstanding balances.

Accounting Fundamentals

An effective guest account system consists of tasks performed during each


stage of guest cycle. During the pre-arrival stage, the guest accounting system
captures data related to the type of reservation guarantee and tracks pre
payments and advance deposits. When a guest arrives at the front desk, the
guest accounting system documents the application of room rate and tax at
registration. During occupancy a guest accounting system tracks authorized
guest purchases. Finally, the system ensures payment for outstanding goods
and services at the time of check out.
In brief the front office accounting system:
 Creates and maintains an accurate accounting record for each
guest / non-guest account
 Tracks financial transactions throughout the guest cycle
 Ensures financial control over cash and non-cash transactions
 Record settlements for all goods and services produced

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Guest Accounting Cycle

Pre arrival

Departure Arrival
Stage 3 THE CYCLE OF SERVICE Stage
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Account Settlement Account
Creation

Stage 2 Account Maintenance


Occupancy

Accounts
An account is a form on which financial data are summarized. An account may
be imagined as a bin or a container which stores the results of various business
transactions. The increases and decreases in an account are calculated and
resulting monetary amount is the account balance. Any financial transaction
that occurs in a hotel may affect several accounts. Front Office accounts are
recordkeeping devices to store about guest and non-guest financial transactions.

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In the simplest written form, an account resembles the letter T .
Account Name
Charges Payments

This form of recording is called a T – account .The growing use of front office
computers has diminished the popularity T accounts. For a front office account
charges
are increases in the account balance and are entered on the left side of the T-
account. Payments are decreases in the account balance and are entered on the
right side of the T-account. The account balance is the difference between the
totals of the entries on the left side and the right side of the T account .

Front Office accounting documents typically use a journal form .In a non-
automated or semi-automated record keeping system, the journal form might
contain the following information :

Description Charges Payments Balance


of Account

Similar to a T-account, increases in the account balance are entered under


charges, while decreases in the account balance are entered under payments. In
a fully automated system, charges and payments may be listed in a single

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column with the amounts of payments placed within parentheses or noted with
minus signs to indicate their effect (a decrease ) on the account balance.
In accounting terminology, the left side of an account is called the debit side
(abbreviated dr.) and the right side is called the credit side (abbreviated cr.). Debit
and credits do not imply anything good or bad about an account. The value of
debits and credits results from the use of double entry book keeping , every
transaction creates entries that affect at least two accounts. The sum of the debit
entries created by a transaction must equal the sum of the credit entries created
by that transaction. This fact forms the basis for an accounting process called
the night audit.

Guest Account
A guest account is a record of financial transactions which occur between a
guest and the hotel. Guest accounts are created when guests guarantee their
reservations or when they register at the front desk. During occupancy, the front
office is responsible for and records all transactions affecting the balance of a
guest account. The front office usually seeks payment for any outstanding guest
account balance during the settlement stage of the guest cycle. Certain
circumstances may require the guest to make a partial or full payment at other
times during the guest cycle. For eg., if the front office is to enforce the hotels
house limit, guest who exceeds that limit may be asked to settle part or all of the
outstanding balance. When there is a house limit, accounts settlement action
is initiated when the account balance exceeds a predetermined limit, not at the
time of check out.

Non-Guest Account.
A hotel may extend in-house charge privileges to local businesses or agencies as
a means of promotion, or to groups sponsoring meetings at the hotel. The front
office creates non-guest account to track such transactions. These accounts
may also be called house accounts or city accounts. Non-guest accounts are also

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created when a former guest fails to settle his or her account at the time of
departure. When the guest status changes to non-guest, the responsibility for
account settlement shifts from the front office to the accounting department.
Unlike guest accounts, which are compiled daily, non-guest accounts are
normally billed on a monthly basis by the hotel’s accounting division.

Folios
Front office transactions are typically charted on account statement called
folios. A folio is a statement of all transactions (debits & credits) affecting the
balance of a single account. When an account is created, it is assigned a folio
with a starting balance of zero. All transactions which increase (debits) or
decrease (credits) the balances of the account are recorded on the folio. At
settlement, a guest folio should be returned to a zero balance by cash payment
or by transfer to an approved credit card or direct billing account.
The process of recording transactions on a folio is called posting. A transaction is
posted when it has been recorded on the proper folio in the proper location and
a new balance has been determined. When posting transactions, the front office
may rely on hand written folios (if it is using a non-automated system), a
machine-posted folios (with a semi-automated system), or computer-based
electronic folios (with a fully automated system)
Regardless of the posting technique used, the basic accounting information
recorded on a folio remains the same. In a non-automated or semi-automated
record keeping system, guest folios are maintained at the front desk. In a fully
automated record keeping system, electronic folios are stored in a computer and
can be retrieved, displayed, or printed on request.

There are basically four types of folios used in front office accounting. They
are:
 Guest folios:- accounts assigned to individual persons or guest rooms

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 Master folios:- accounts assigned to more than one person or guest room;
usually reserved for group accounts.
 Non-guest or semi-permanent folios:- accounts assigned to non-guest
businesses or agencies with hotel charge purchase privileges.
 Employee folios:- accounts assigned to employees with charge purchase
privileges. Executives like Sales and Marketing Director, Front Office
Manager may charge the hotel for travel and entertainment to promote the
business

Additional types of folios are frequently created by front office management to


accommodate special circumstances or requests. For e.g... A business guest may
request that his or her charges and payments be split between two personal
folios: one to record expenses to be paid by the sponsoring business, & one to
record personal expenses to be paid by the guest. This is referred to as a split
folio. In this situation, two folios are created for one guest. If the room and tax
portion are to be separated from other charges, the room and tax is posted to the
room folio. This is sometimes called the A folio. Food, beverage, telephone, &
other charges are posted to the incidental folio or B folio.
Every folio should have a unique serial number. Folio serial numbers are needed
for many reasons. First, they serve as identification numbers that help ensure
that all folios are accounted for during an audit of front office transactions.
Second, folio numbers may be used to index information in automated system.
Automated systems frequently create folio numbers when reservations are made.
Folio numbers are then transferred to the front desk for use during registration.
Finally, folio numbers can provide a chain of documentation. In non-automated
& semi-automated systems, folios have specific length & can hold only a limited
number of postings. When a balance must be carried forward to a new folio, the
old folio numbers should be shown as a reference of where the balance
originated.

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Vouchers
A voucher details a transaction to be posted to a front office account. This
document lists detailed transaction information gathered at the source of the
transaction. For example, hotel revenue outlets use vouchers to notify the front
office of guest charge purchases, which require posting. Several types of
vouchers are used in front office accounting including cash vouchers, transfer
vouchers, allowance vouchers and paid-out vouchers. Most computer systems
require few vouchers since terminals are interfaced with the front office
computer.

Points of sale
The term point of sale describes the location at which goods and services are
purchased. Any hotel department that collects revenues for its goods and
services is considered a revenue Centre and thus, a point of sale. Large hotels
support many point of sale, including restaurants, lounges, room service,
laundry etc. The front office accounting system must ensure that all charge
purchases at these point of sale are posted to the proper guest or non-guest
account.
Automated POS system may significantly reduce the time required to post charge
purchase to guest folios, the number of time each piece of data must be handled,
the number of posting errors and late charges.
No matter the location, the point of sale must provide some basic information
when posting a charge through a remote terminal or submitting a voucher to the
front desk. This information includes the amount of the charge, name of the
point of sale outlet, room number and name of the guest and a brief description
of the charge. If a charge is being submitted by a voucher, the signature of the
guest and the identity of the employee submitting the charge are also required.
If the charge is posted through a remote terminal, the employee identification is
captured by the terminal and forwarded to the folio, along with the time of
posting. Posting through an automated terminal still requires a guest signature

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on a voucher for audit purposes and in case there is any dispute regarding the
purchase or the amount.

Ledgers

A ledger is a summary grouping of accounts. The front office ledger is a collection


of front office account folios. The folio represented in the front office are a part of
the front office receivable ledger. An account receivable represents money owed
to the hotel. Front office accounting commonly separates accounts receivable
into two subsidiary groups: the guest ledger( for guest receivables) and the city
ledger (for non-guest receivables)

Guest Ledger
The guest ledger refers to the set of guest accounts that correspond to registered
hotel guests. Guests who make appropriate credit arrangements at registration
maybe extended privileges to charge purchases to their individual account folios
during their stay. Guests may also make payments against their outstanding
balance at any time during occupancy. Guests’ financial transactions are
recorded onto guest ledger accounts to assist in tracking guest account balances.
The guest ledger may be called transient ledger, front office ledger or rooms
ledger. Deposits received from future reservations are usually posted to the
advance deposit ledger, which is part of the guest ledger.

City Ledger
The city ledger also called the non-guest ledger, is the collection of non-guest
accounts. If a guest account is not settled in full by cash payment at check-out,
the guests’ folio balance is transferred from the guest ledger in the front office to
the city ledger in the accounting division for collection. At the time of account
transfer, the responsibility for account collection shifts from the front office to
the accounting division. The city ledger can contain credit card payment

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accounts, direct billing accounts and accounts of past guests due for collection
by the hotel.

Creation and Maintenance of Accounts

The task of accurately and completely recording all transactions that affect guest
ledger accounts is the responsibility of the front office. The front office also
records all transactions which affect non-guest accounts. The accounting
department is ultimately responsible for collection of non-guest ledger accounts
Guest folios are created during the reservation process or at the time of
registration. To prepare a folio for use, information from the guest’s reservation
or registration record must be transferred to the folio. Non-automated and semi-
automated systems commonly use pre-numbered folios for internal control
purposes. Manually posted or machine posted guest folio cards used in non-
automated operations are stored in a front desk folio tray. A folio tray may also
be called a posting tray, folio well or bucket.
In a fully automated systems, guest information is automatically transferred
from an electronic reservation record or captured at registration and entered
onto an electronic folio. In some systems a preliminary electronic folio is created
automatically and simultaneously with the reservation record. This enables
postings to guest accounts before registration. Such items as pre payments and
advance deposits can thus be accurately monitored.
At check-in reservations data are verified and combined with room rate
information and the guest’s assigned room number to create an electronic folio.
For a walk-in guest, equivalent information is captured during registration and
entered into a front office computer terminal. One of the major advantages of
electronic data processing is that captured data need only be handled once.

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Recordkeeping Systems – Assignment

Charge Privileges
To establish an in-house line of credit, a guest may be required to present an
acceptable credit card or a company billing authorization at the time of
registration. Credit can be established at the time of reservations by obtaining
the number and expiration date of credit card and electronically transmitting
this information to the credit card company with a request for an amount
guarantee. Once a line of credit has been approved, guests are authorized to
make charge purchases.
Guests who pay cash for accommodation at registration are typically not
extended charge purchase privileges. These guests are called paid-in-advance
guests or PIA guests. In a fully automated system, PIA accounts are set to no-
post status. Since point of sale terminals throughout the hotel have immediate
access to stored account information, a no-post status account is one that
cannot accept charge purchase transactions. In non-automated and semi-
automated properties, a PIA list is manually distributed to all revenue centers.
Local businesses or residents may apply to the hotel and qualify for house
accounts.

Account Maintenance
A folio is used to record transactions which affect a front office account balance.
Guest folios must be accurate, complete and properly filed since guests may
inquire about their account balance or check out of the hotel with little or no
advance notice. Transaction postings conform to a basic front office accounting
formula. The accounting formula is

Previous Balance + Debits – Credits = Net Outstanding Balance


PB + DR - CR = NOB

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Settlement of Accounts
The collection of payment for outstanding account balances is called account
settlement. Settlement involves bringing an account balance to zero. An account
can be brought to zero balance as a result of cash payment in full or a transfer
to an approved company or travel agency account. Transfers to approved
deferred payment plans move outstanding guest folio balance from the guest
ledger to the city ledger.

ASSIGNMENTS
1. Guest accounting Recordkeeping Systems
 Manual (formats of Guest weekly bill and Visitor’s tabular ledger)
 Semi-automatic (format of posting machine folio)
 Automated
2. Formats
 Guest folio
 Charge Voucher
 Allowance Voucher
 Paid-out Voucher

Include notes on Tracking Transactions

Recommended Reading
 Managing Front Office Operations by Michael L.Kasavana and Richard
M.Brooks
 Front Office Management by S.K.Bhatnagar
 Accommodation Services by Vivienne O’Shannessy
 Hotel Front Office by Sudhir Andrews

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