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Tutorial 08 · Beginner · 10 min read

Ledger Accounts & Posting

A journal tells the story chronologically. A ledger reorganises it by account so you can answer the only question that ever really matters: how much cash do we actually have?

Why We Need a Ledger

The journal records transactions chronologically — perfect for an audit trail, useless for answering questions like "what's my cash balance right now?" You'd have to scan every page looking for cash entries.

The ledger fixes that. It collects all the entries for one account (Cash, Sales, Furniture, etc.) into one place, so a single glance tells you that account's current balance. Every account in the business has its own ledger page.

Standard Format of a Ledger Account

A ledger account has two sides — debit on the left, credit on the right — and looks like this:

Cash Account
DateParticulars / J.R. / AmountDateParticulars / J.R. / Amount
Dr. (left side)Cr. (right side)
Jan 1To Capital A/c · 100,000Jan 2By Furniture A/c · 20,000

Conventions:

  • Debit-side entries start with the word "To"
  • Credit-side entries start with the word "By"
  • The "Particulars" column shows the other account from the original journal entry
  • "J.R." is the Journal Reference — page number in the journal

Posting from Journal to Ledger

Posting just means copying each part of a journal entry into the relevant ledger account. Steps:

  1. Find the ledger account for the first debit in the journal entry
  2. On the debit side, write the date (same as transaction date, not posting date)
  3. In particulars, write "To [name of the credited account]"
  4. In J.R., write the journal page number
  5. Enter the amount
  6. Now flip to the ledger account for the credit and repeat — but on the credit side, using "By [name of the debited account]"

Balancing an Account

The "balance" of an account is the difference between the two sides. It's written on whichever side is smaller to make them equal — and that balance carries forward to the next period.

Rules for Balancing

  1. Total both columns separately (on a scratch sheet first)
  2. Calculate the difference between the two totals
  3. Write the difference on the smaller side as "By/To Balance c/d" (carried down)
  4. Total both sides — they should now be equal — and draw a double line
  5. On the opposite side, below the double line, write "By/To Balance b/d" (brought down) for the next period
If…Balance is calledIndicates
Total debits > total creditsDebit balanceAsset, expense, or money owed to us (if personal)
Total credits > total debitsCredit balanceLiability, income, capital, or money we owe (if personal)
Total debits = total creditsNil balanceAccount is settled
Important: Closing balance of this period = Opening balance of next period. The "Balance c/d" on March 31 becomes the "Balance b/d" on April 1.

Journal vs Ledger — Key Differences

BasisJournal / Books of Original EntryLedger
RecordingTransactions enter here first — book of primary entryEntries transferred from journal — book of final entry
NarrationsIncluded after every entryNot recorded
OrderChronologicalAnalytical (grouped by account)
Final accountsCannot prepare directly from the journalFinal accounts prepared from ledger balances
Accuracy checkNo direct check possibleTested through trial balance
Process nameJournalisingPosting

Closing Accounts at Year End

  • Personal accounts — a debit balance means that party owes the business; a credit balance means the business owes them. Balance is carried forward to the next year.
  • Real accounts — assets always show debit balances and are carried forward.
  • Nominal accounts — these are not carried forward. At year-end their balances are transferred to the Trading and P&L Account, after which the account is closed.
In iAccounting

Every ledger account in iAccounting is live — click any voucher and the ledger updates instantly. You can drill into any number on a report all the way down to the source voucher in two clicks.

See drill-down reports →

Build on this lesson with these related tutorials:

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