Accounting Chapter 4 Unit 7 Notes Posting To The Ledger: Mrs. Joudrey
Accounting Chapter 4 Unit 7 Notes Posting To The Ledger: Mrs. Joudrey
Accounting Chapter 4 Unit 7 Notes Posting To The Ledger: Mrs. Joudrey
Unit 7 Notes
Posting to the Ledger
Mrs. Joudrey
General Journal
A general journal is a chronological (by
date) record of all transactions However it
DOES NOT record the totals for each of
the accounts.
Information from the general journal is
transferred to the general ledger by a
process called POSTING.
Business Transaction Journal Ledger
BALANCE-COLUMN LEDGER
ACCOUNT
We used T-accounts to learn the rules of
debit and credit, but T-accounts are not
very practical in the business world. The
most widely used form of account is the
“BALANCE-COLUMN LEDGER
ACCOUNT” which is sometimes called a
three-column account.
Cash Account
Here is an example to introduce you to
this. I have taken the following T-account
for “cash” and converted it to a balance-
column ledger account.
Cash Account
Here is what the transactions that were
recorded in the cash T-account would look
like in a balance-column ledger account.
Each account will now have its own chart
like the one below.
Running Balance
A running balance is recorded in the balance-
column ledger on each line.
The DR./CR. column indicates if the balance on
that line is a debit or credit (this would be
determined with the same logic as you would if
you were using a T-account – think of how you
know if the balance goes on the debit or credit
side of a T-account – same thing applies here).
Note how even though the entries on Nov. 3 and
6 are credits, the balance is still a debit.
Chart of Accounts
Each account in a ledger has a title
(example: cash) and a number (ex. 100).
Accounts are placed in a ledger
numerically (by number).
A list of the account name and number is
called a chart of accounts.
Accounts are numbered in the same order
as they appear on the balance sheet and
income statement.
Chart of Accounts
Assets are 100’s
Liabilities are 200’s
Owner’s Equity is 300’s
Revenues are 400’s
Expenses are 500’s
Posting to a Balance-Column Form
of Ledger Account
This is how you would post a $900 general
journal entry to the cash account in the
balance column-form of ledger account:
Posting to a Balance-Column Form
of Ledger Account
Steps in Posting:
Step 1: Find the account you need to use
in the ledger
Step 2: Record the date (month and year
don’t need to be repeated if they are the
same as the transaction above)
Step 3: Enter the amount in the correct
column (debit or credit)
Steps in Posting:
Step 4: Calculate the new balance – if the amount
you just entered is a debit and the balance is a debit
you will add the numbers (same if they were both
credit), but if the amount you entered is different
from the balance in the account (one is a debit and
one is a credit) you need to subtract. Same
procedure as you did in T-accounts.