The accounting cycle involves recording financial transactions, posting them to ledger accounts, preparing an unadjusted trial balance, making adjusting entries, preparing an adjusted trial balance and financial statements, recording closing entries to transfer temporary account balances, and optionally making reversing entries to avoid double counting in the next period. It is a holistic process that analyzes transactions, records them chronologically, and represents the company's financial position over time.
The accounting cycle involves recording financial transactions, posting them to ledger accounts, preparing an unadjusted trial balance, making adjusting entries, preparing an adjusted trial balance and financial statements, recording closing entries to transfer temporary account balances, and optionally making reversing entries to avoid double counting in the next period. It is a holistic process that analyzes transactions, records them chronologically, and represents the company's financial position over time.
The accounting cycle involves recording financial transactions, posting them to ledger accounts, preparing an unadjusted trial balance, making adjusting entries, preparing an adjusted trial balance and financial statements, recording closing entries to transfer temporary account balances, and optionally making reversing entries to avoid double counting in the next period. It is a holistic process that analyzes transactions, records them chronologically, and represents the company's financial position over time.
The accounting cycle involves recording financial transactions, posting them to ledger accounts, preparing an unadjusted trial balance, making adjusting entries, preparing an adjusted trial balance and financial statements, recording closing entries to transfer temporary account balances, and optionally making reversing entries to avoid double counting in the next period. It is a holistic process that analyzes transactions, records them chronologically, and represents the company's financial position over time.
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ACCOUNTING CYCLE
What is the Accounting Cycle?
• The accounting cycle is the holistic process of recording and processing all financial transactions of a company, from when the transaction occurs, to its representation on the financial statements, to closing the accounts. Steps in the accounting cycle Analyzing and Classify Data about an Economic Event • Events are analyzed to find the impact on the financial position or to be more specific the impacts on the accounting equation. • Documents such as a receipt, an invoice, a depreciation schedule, and a bank statement, etc. provide evidence that an economic event has actually occurred. Journalizing the transaction
• Transactions having an impact on the financial
position of a business are recorded in the general journal. Posting from the Journals to the General Ledger • Transactions recorded in the general journal are then posted to the general ledger accounts. Preparing the Unadjusted Trial Balance • Unadjusted trial balance makes the next steps of the accounting process easy and provides the balances of all the accounts that may require an adjustment in the next step. Recording Adjusting Entries
• Adjusting entries are required to be is because
a transaction may have influence revenues or expenses beyond the current accounting period and to journalize to the events that not yet recorded. Preparing the Adjusted Trial Balance
• It helps to create the income statement and
balance sheet and provide enough information for preparing the cash flow statement. Preparing Financial Statements
• Financial statements are prepared from the
balances from the adjusted trial balance. The financial statements are made at the very last of the accounting period. Recording Closing Entries
• At the end of an accounting period, Closing
entries are made to transfer data in the temporary accounts to the permanent balance sheet or income statement accounts. Preparing a Closing Trial Balance
• To make sure that debits equal credits, the
final trial balance is prepared. As the temporary ones have been closed only the permanent accounts appear on the closing trial balance to make sure that debits equal credits. Recording Reversing Entries
• Posit closing entries is an optional step of the
accounting cycle. A reversing journal entry is recorded on the first day of the new period for avoiding double counting the amount when the transaction occurs in the next period.