An accounting document used to record non-cash transactions and adjusting entries that don't involve direct receipt or payment of money.
A Journal Voucher is used for entries that aren't covered by Cash, Bank, Sales, or Purchase vouchers — primarily adjusting entries, provisions, transfers between accounts, and rectification entries. Examples: depreciation, prepaid expense adjustments, accrued expense recognition, bad debt write-off, and closing entries. In Tally and other Indian accounting software, the Journal Voucher (F7) is one of the most frequently used vouchers for period-end adjustments. Each journal voucher must have equal debits and credits with narration explaining the transaction.
Month-end adjustments via Journal Vouchers: 1) Depreciation: Dr. Depreciation Expense ₹25,000, Cr. Accumulated Depreciation ₹25,000. 2) Prepaid rent adjustment: Dr. Rent Expense ₹50,000, Cr. Prepaid Rent ₹50,000. 3) Accrued salary: Dr. Salary Expense ₹3,00,000, Cr. Salary Payable ₹3,00,000. Each has narration and is authorized by the accountant.
glossaryTermPage.reasons.accuracy
glossaryTermPage.reasons.compliance
glossaryTermPage.reasons.decisions
glossaryTermPage.reasons.efficiency
A Journal Entry is the accounting concept (debit X, credit Y). A Journal Voucher is the physical/digital DOCUMENT that records and authorizes that entry. The voucher includes: date, voucher number, accounts affected, amounts, narration, and authorization signature. It's the source document for the journal entry.
Use Journal Voucher for: provisions, depreciation, accruals, transfers between accounts, rectification entries, and any non-cash adjustment. Use Payment/Receipt voucher for cash/bank transactions. Use Sales/Purchase voucher for trade transactions. Use Contra for bank-to-cash transfers.
A record of a financial transaction in the accounting system, showing the accounts affected, amounts debited and credited, date, and description.
The principal book of accounts where all financial transactions are classified and recorded under specific account heads, forming the basis for financial statements.
Journal entries made at the end of an accounting period to transfer balances of temporary accounts (revenue, expenses) to permanent accounts (retained earnings).
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.
The systematic recording, organizing, and maintaining of all financial transactions in a business on a day-to-day basis.
glossaryTermPage.cta.subtitle