A journal entry is the actual recording of a financial transaction in your books. It's where double-entry bookkeeping comes to life — every journal entry has at least one debit and one credit, and they must always be equal.
Every journal entry has 5 essential components:
When the transaction occurred
Which accounts are affected
Amount being debited
Amount being credited
Description of the transaction
One debit account + one credit account. Example: Cash received from customer.
Multiple debits and/or credits in one entry. Example: Salary payment with PF and TDS deductions.
Date: 2025-04-15 • Invoice #INV-001 to ABC Ltd for consulting services
| Account | Debit (Dr) | Credit (Cr) |
|---|---|---|
| Accounts Receivable | ₹1,18,000 | |
| Sales Revenue | ₹1,00,000 | |
| GST Payable (18%) | ₹18,000 |
Date: 2025-04-20 • Received payment from ABC Ltd against INV-001
| Account | Debit (Dr) | Credit (Cr) |
|---|---|---|
| Bank Account — Current | ₹1,18,000 | |
| Accounts Receivable | ₹1,18,000 |
Date: 2025-04-22 • Purchased raw materials from XYZ Suppliers on credit
| Account | Debit (Dr) | Credit (Cr) |
|---|---|---|
| Inventory / Purchases | ₹50,000 | |
| GST Input Credit (18%) | ₹9,000 | |
| Accounts Payable | ₹59,000 |
Date: 2025-04-30 • April salaries for 3 employees
| Account | Debit (Dr) | Credit (Cr) |
|---|---|---|
| Salary & Wages Expense | ₹1,50,000 | |
| PF Payable (Employer) | ₹18,000 | |
| TDS Payable | ₹7,500 | |
| Bank Account — Current | ₹1,24,500 |
Date: 2025-04-01 • Owner invested additional capital into the business
| Account | Debit (Dr) | Credit (Cr) |
|---|---|---|
| Bank Account — Current | ₹5,00,000 | |
| Owner's Capital | ₹5,00,000 |
Unbalanced entries — total debits don't equal total credits. Software like Laabam.One prevents this automatically.
Wrong account selection — posting rent to 'Office Supplies' instead of 'Rent Expense'. Review your Chart of Accounts.
Missing GST entries — forgetting to record GST payable or GST input credit alongside the main transaction.
Wrong date — recording in the wrong accounting period affects your monthly/quarterly reports.
No narration — months later, you won't remember what 'Bank ₹50,000' was for without a description.
Every journal entry must have equal debits and credits — this is non-negotiable.
Include a date, accounts, amounts, and a clear narration for every entry.
Compound entries (multiple debits/credits) are common in real business — especially with taxes.
Journal entries flow into the ledger, then the trial balance, then financial statements.
Accounting software automates journal entries when you create invoices, record payments, or log expenses.