Journal Entry – Full Explanation - Concept 1 of 500

Contents

1. Meaning of Journal

A Journal is the book of original entry in which transactions are recorded in chronological order.

Each record in the Journal is called a Journal Entry. It captures:

2. Definition of Journal Entry ()

“Recording a transaction in the Journal, showing which account is debited and which is credited according to the rules of accounting, is called a Journal Entry.”

3. Golden Rules of Accounting

Journal Entries follow the Golden Rules:

These rules ensure proper classification of accounts and accuracy in recording.

4. Steps in Journalising

  1. Identify the transaction from source documents.
  2. Classify the accounts into Personal, Real, Nominal.
  3. Apply the Golden Rules to decide Debit/Credit.
  4. Record in Journal format:
Date        Particulars                 Debit (₹)   Credit (₹)
dd/mm/yyyy  Debit A/c name Dr.                      Amount
                To Credit A/c name                  Amount
(Narration)
    

5. Types of Journal Entries

6. Illustrations

Business Started with Cash ₹1,00,000

Cash A/c        Dr. 1,00,000
     To Capital A/c        1,00,000
(Being capital introduced)
    

Rent Paid ₹10,000

Rent A/c        Dr. 10,000
     To Cash A/c           10,000
(Being rent paid in cash)
    

Goods Purchased on Credit from X ₹50,000

Purchase A/c    Dr. 50,000
     To X A/c              50,000
(Being goods purchased on credit)
    

7. Journal Entries → Ledger → Trial Balance → Financial Statements

(A) From Journal to Ledger

Every Journal Entry is posted into the Ledger.

Example: “Rent A/c Dr. To Cash A/c” → Rent A/c (Debit side), Cash A/c (Credit side).

(B) From Ledger to Trial Balance

At the end of the period, balances from all ledger accounts are extracted.

They are listed in a Trial Balance, which ensures:
Total Debits = Total Credits.

AccountDebit (₹)Credit (₹)
Cash A/c90,000
Rent A/c10,000
Capital A/c1,00,000
Purchase A/c50,000
X A/c50,000
Totals1,50,0001,50,000

(C) From Trial Balance to Financial Statements

8. Importance of Journal Entries in the Accounting Cycle

9. Complete Flow

Transaction → Journal Entry → Ledger Posting → Trial Balance → Financial Statements (Trading, P&L, Balance Sheet)