Journal entries in accounting

Understanding Journal Entries in Accounting

Many students come from non-commerce backgrounds and often find accounting terminology confusing. Terms such as Journal, Ledger, Voucher, Debit, Credit and posting may appear technical at first. However, accounting is essentially a systematic method of recording business transactions.

Before an accountant records a transaction, an important question must be answered:

“What evidence exists that the transaction actually occurred?”

The answer lies in source documents and vouchers. These documents provide the basis for recording transactions in the Journal, which is known as the Book of Original Entry.

Let us understand the concept

Why do we need a Journal?

Professor: Students, suppose a company purchases a laptop for office use. How does the accountant know that the purchase took place?

Student A: There must be a bill or invoice.

Professor: Correct. Accounting records are not based on assumptions. They are supported by documentary evidence.

Only after verifying the supporting document does the accountant record the transaction in the Journal.

Definition

A Journal is the book in which business transactions are recorded for the first time in chronological order by applying the rules of debit and credit.

Therefore, the Journal is often called the: Book of Original Entry

Student B: Sir, what kind of documents are used?

Professor: Good question.

Common source documents include:

TransactionSupporting Document
Purchase of goodsSupplier Invoice
Sale of goodsSales Invoice
Cash receivedReceipt Voucher
Cash paidPayment Voucher
Bank transactionBank Statement
Salary paymentPayroll Record
Purchase of machineryTax Invoice
Payment through UPI/NEFTBank Advice or Transaction Record

Without documentary evidence, a transaction should generally not be recorded.

Example 1: Purchase of furniture for cash

Supporting document

Invoice or Bill

Amount: Rs.20,000

Professor: What accounts are affected?

Student C: Furniture increases and Cash decreases.

Professor: Correct.

Journal entries in accounting

Journal Entry

Furniture A/c Dr.  Rs.20,000

  To Cash A/c Rs.20,000

(Being furniture purchased for cash)

Example 2: Goods purchased on credit

Supporting Document

Purchase Invoice received from supplier

Amount: Rs.50,000

Journal Entry

Purchases A/c Dr. Rs.50,000

  To Supplier A/c Rs.50,000

(Being goods purchased on credit)

Example 3: Salary paid through bank

Supporting Document

Salary Sheet and Bank Transfer Record

Amount: Rs.50,000

Journal Entry

Salary A/c Dr.  Rs.50,000

  To Bank A/c Rs. 50,000

(Being salary paid through bank)

What information does a Journal contain?

A typical journal contains:

Journal entries in accounting

What Information Does a Journal Contain?

A typical journal contains:

Date                      Particulars           L.F.                  Debit (Rs.)            Credit (Rs.)

Where:

  • Date indicates when the transaction occurred.
  • Particulars describe the transaction.
  • L.F. (Ledger Folio) refers to the ledger page number.
  • Debit and Credit columns show the amounts.

Different types of Journals

Student D: Sir, are all transactions recorded in one journal?

Professor: In small businesses, yes. However, larger organizations often use specialised journals.

1. General Journal

Used for:

  • Opening entries
  • Adjustment entries
  • Rectification entries
  • Closing entries

General Journal: Examples

Used ForExampleJournal Entry
Opening entriesBusiness starts the year with Cash Rs.1,00,000 and Furniture Rs.50,000.Cash A/c Dr. Rs.1,00,000
Furniture A/c Dr. Rs.50,000
To Capital A/c Rs. 1,50,000
Adjustment entriesSalary for March Rs.5,000 is outstanding at year-endSalary A/c Dr. Rs.5,000
To Outstanding Salary A/c Rs.5,000
Rectification entriesOffice rent Rs.2,000 wrongly debited to Salary AccountRent A/c Dr. Rs.2,000
To Salary A/c Rs.2,000
Closing entriesTransfer salary expense of Rs.50,000 to Profit & Loss Account at year-endProfit & Loss A/c Dr. Rs.50,000
To Salary A/c Rs.50,000

Student: Sir, why are these entries recorded in the General Journal and not in the Purchase Journal or Sales Journal?

Professor: Because these transactions do not occur regularly like purchases, sales or cash receipts/payments. They are special accounting entries generally passed at the beginning, during review, correction or closing of an accounting period.

Quick Understanding

Type of EntryPurpose
Opening entryBrings forward assets, liabilities and capital at the beginning of the accounting period
Adjustment entryEnsures income and expenses are recorded in the correct accounting period
Rectification entryCorrects accounting errors
Closing entryTransfers income and expense balances to Profit & Loss Account and prepares books for the next period

Special Journal

2. Purchase Journal

Records credit purchases of goods.

3. Sales Journal

Records credit sales of goods.

4. Purchase Returns Journal

Records goods returned to suppliers.

5. Sales Returns Journal

Records goods returned by customers.

6. Cash Book

Records cash and bank transactions and often functions as both a journal and a ledger.

Understanding Special Journals

JournalPurposeExample transactionJournal entryAre cash transactions recorded here?
Purchase JournalRecords credit purchases of goods meant for resalePurchased goods on credit from ABC Traders Rs.50,000Purchases A/c Dr. Rs.50,000
To ABC Traders A/c Rs.50,000
No. Cash purchases are recorded in the Cash Book.
Sales JournalRecords credit sales of goodsSold goods on credit to Mr. Raj Rs.30,000Raj A/c Dr. Rs.30,000
To Sales A/c Rs.30,000
No. Cash sales are recorded in the Cash Book.
Purchase Returns Journal (Returns Outward Book)Records return of goods previously purchased on creditReturned goods worth Rs.5,000 to ABC TradersABC Traders A/c Dr. Rs.5,000
To Purchase Returns A/c Rs.5,000
No. Cash purchase returns are recorded through the Cash Book.
Sales Returns Journal (Returns Inward Book)Records return of goods previously sold on creditCustomer returned goods worth Rs.2,000Sales Returns A/c Dr. Rs.2,000
To Customer A/c Rs.2,000
No. Refunds relating to cash sales are recorded through the Cash Book.

Why is Journal important?

Professor: Imagine a business performing hundreds of transactions every month.

Without a Journal:

  • Transactions may be omitted.
  • Transactions may be duplicated.
  • The sequence of events may be lost.

The Journal ensures that every transaction is recorded systematically and chronologically.

What happens after the Journal?

Student A: Once the Journal is prepared, what happens next?

Professor: The entries are transferred to the Ledger.

The process is called: Posting

Thus:

Source Documents

Journal

Ledger

Trial Balance

Financial Statements
Journal entries in accounting

Fundamental Accounting Concepts

Source documentTypical business eventAccounting impact
Purchase InvoicePurchase of goods/assetsIncrease in assets or expenses
Sales InvoiceSale of goods/servicesIncrease in income
ReceiptReceipt of cash or chequeIncrease in cash/bank
Payment VoucherPayment madeDecrease in cash/bank
Bank StatementBank transactionIncrease or decrease in bank balance
Debit NotePurchase returnReduction in liability
Credit NoteSales returnReduction in receivable or sales

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