Home Tutorials The Cash Book
Tutorial 10 · Intermediate · 11 min read

The Cash Book

The cash book is the one book a business cannot survive without. It is unique — both a book of original entry and a ledger account in one. Here is every variation you will encounter.

What is a Cash Book?

The cash book is unique — it serves a dual role:

  • It's a book of original entry — cash transactions enter the books here first, just like the journal
  • It's also a ledger account for cash — no separate Cash A/c needs to be maintained in the ledger

When a cash book is maintained, cash transactions are never recorded in the journal, and no separate Cash or Bank A/c is required in the ledger.

Cash books come in four variants of increasing sophistication: single column, double column, triple column, and a separate petty cash book.

Single Column Cash Book

The simplest form. One amount column on each side, for cash only. Records nothing else — no cheques, no discounts, no non-cash transactions.

Format

DateReceiptsL.F.AmountDatePaymentsL.F.Amount
Jan 1To Capital A/c2,00,000Jan 3By Purchases A/c1,40,000
Jan 7To Sales A/c80,000Jan 5By Stationery A/c2,000

How to balance it

  • Receipts column (debit side) will always be ≥ payments column (you can't pay more than you've received)
  • Write the difference as "By Balance c/d" on the credit side
  • The balance b/d on the next day is the opening cash

Double Column Cash Book (Cash + Bank)

Two amount columns on each side — one for cash, one for bank.

Format

DateReceiptsL.F.CashBankDatePaymentsL.F.CashBank
Mar 1To Balance b/d80,0001,20,000Mar 4By Bank A/cC24,000
Mar 3To Osman A/c24,000Mar 8By Cash A/cC20,000

Contra Entries

Notice the "C" in the L.F. column above? That marks a contra entry — a transaction that affects both cash and bank simultaneously. Examples:

  • Cash deposited into bank → Cash decreases, Bank increases
  • Cash withdrawn from bank for business use → Bank decreases, Cash increases

In a double-column cash book, a contra entry is recorded on both sides:

  • Debit side (Bank column): "To Cash A/c" with "C" in L.F.
  • Credit side (Cash column): "By Bank A/c" with "C" in L.F.

The "C" tells you not to post this entry to the ledger — it's already fully recorded within the cash book itself.

Triple Column Cash Book (Cash + Bank + Discount)

The most comprehensive form. Three money columns on each side: cash, bank, and discount. Used by larger firms that frequently allow and receive cash discounts.

How discounts work

  • Discount Allowed (to debtors paying promptly) is recorded on the debit side
  • Discount Received (from creditors when we pay promptly) is recorded on the credit side
  • The discount columns are not balanced — they're totalled and posted to Discount Allowed A/c (debit) and Discount Received A/c (credit) in the ledger

Petty Cash Book & the Imprest System

Large businesses have a separate Petty Cash Book to track lots of small expenses — tea, taxi fares, postage, photocopying — so these don't clutter the main cash book. A Petty Cashier is appointed, separate from the Chief Cashier.

The Imprest System

The petty cashier is given a fixed amount (say ₹2,000) — the imprest amount — at the start of the period.

As they make small payments, the cash reduces. When most of it is spent (say ₹1,780), they get reimbursed for exactly that amount, restoring the imprest balance to ₹2,000 for the next period.

Benefits:

  • The petty cashier is always accountable for a known, fixed amount
  • The Chief Cashier gets a periodic summary of small expenses rather than dozens of micro-vouchers
  • Reimbursements naturally occur weekly, fortnightly or monthly depending on volume

Format

A petty cash book has analysis columns — one column per type of expense (Travelling, Postage, Stationery, Office Expenses, Misc.) so totals by category are immediately visible.

The closing balance of petty cash appears on the asset side of the Balance Sheet as "Cash in Hand".

In iAccounting

iAccounting maintains cash and bank as separate ledgers automatically. Contra entries (cash deposits, withdrawals, bank-to-bank transfers) are handled through a dedicated Contra Voucher that takes care of both sides in one step. Petty cash works the same way — just create a separate "Petty Cash" ledger and reimburse it on the imprest cycle that suits you.

See cash & bank features →

Build on this lesson with these related tutorials:

Put theory into practice

iAccounting automates everything in this tutorial — journal entries, ledgers, trial balance, GST returns and final accounts. Free for 14 days, no credit card.

Start Free Trial Browse All Tutorials