Mistakes in accounting records that may or may not be revealed by the Trial Balance, categorized by their effect on the balance agreement.
A Trial Balance (TB) checks if total debits equal total credits, but its agreement does NOT guarantee error-free books. Errors revealed by TB (cause disagreement): one-sided entries, wrong totals, incorrect balance transfers, and omission of one posting. Errors NOT revealed by TB (books still balance): errors of omission (complete transaction missed), errors of commission (correct amount, wrong account of same class), errors of principle (revenue vs capital misclassification), compensating errors (two opposite errors cancel out), and errors of original entry (wrong amount in both debit and credit). Suspense Account temporarily holds the TB difference while errors are located.
TB doesn't balance — excess credit of ₹5,000. Investigation reveals: 1) Sales return ₹3,000 posted to debit of Sales instead of credit of Returns (₹6,000 effect — wait, that's ₹6,000 not ₹5,000). Further check: 2) Rent ₹1,000 posted to debit twice (₹1,000 excess debit). Net: ₹6,000 excess credit – ₹1,000 excess debit = ₹5,000 excess credit. Found!
Ensures accurate financial reporting and record-keeping
Helps maintain regulatory and tax compliance
Enables better-informed business decisions
Improves operational efficiency and cash flow management
Because the TB only checks if debits = credits in TOTAL. Errors that maintain this equality are invisible: posting to wrong account (same side), omitting entire transactions, recording wrong amount equally on both sides, two opposite errors cancelling each other. That's why additional checks (bank reconciliation, ledger review, ratio analysis) are needed beyond TB.
Systematic approach: 1) Check the difference amount — is it divisible by 2? (one-sided error), by 9? (transposition error like 53 vs 35), or exact amount of a transaction? 2) Re-add all totals, 3) Check balance transfers from ledger to TB, 4) Review recent entries around the problem period, 5) Compare with previous TB to isolate which accounts changed.
A report listing the closing balances of all general ledger accounts at a specific date, used to verify that total debits equal total credits.
A record of a financial transaction in the accounting system, showing the accounts affected, amounts debited and credited, date, and description.
A temporary account used to record transactions that cannot be immediately classified into the correct account due to incomplete information.
The process of comparing two sets of records to ensure they agree and identify any discrepancies, most commonly matching internal accounting records with bank statements.
Journal entries made at the end of an accounting period to transfer balances of temporary accounts (revenue, expenses) to permanent accounts (retained earnings).
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