1 / 14

By : Sara AlSager

Adjustment. By : Sara AlSager. Adjustment Types. Revenues. Expenses. Deferrals. Accruals. Deferrals. Accruals. Revenues. Deferrals: refers to receipts in one accounting period, but they will be earned in future accounting periods.

Télécharger la présentation

By : Sara AlSager

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Adjustment By : Sara AlSager

  2. Adjustment Types Revenues Expenses Deferrals Accruals Deferrals Accruals

  3. Revenues Deferrals: refers to receipts in one accounting period, but they will be earned in future accounting periods. For example, the insurance company has a cash receipt in December for a six-month insurance premium. However, the insurance company will report this as part of its revenues in January through June. Accruals: refers to the reporting of revenues and the related receivables in the period in which they are earned, and that period is prior to the period of the cash receipt. For example, the interest earned in December on an investment in a government bond, but the interest will not be received until January.

  4. Revenues

  5. Example (Deferred Revenues) • When a company receives revenues in advance, it has an obligation to deliver goods or perform services. These unearned revenues are shown in a liability account. • As a company delivers part of the goods or performs part of the services, it earns a part of the advance receipts. • The earned portion must be transferred from the liability account to a revenue account.

  6. Example(Accrued Revenues) • Accrued revenues are revenues that a company has earned by performing a service or delivering goods but for which no entry has been made in the accounting records. • Any revenues earned but not recorded during an accounting period require an adjusting entry that debits an asset account and credits a revenue account.

  7. Expenses Deferrals: refers to a payment that was made in one period, but will be reported as an expense in a later period. An example is the payment in December for the six-month insurance premium that will be reported as an expense in the months of January through June. Accruals: refers to the reporting of an expense and the related liability in the period in which they occur, and that period is prior to the period in which the payment is made. An example is the electricity that is used in December, but the payment will not be made until January.

  8. Expenses

  9. example (Deferred Expenses) • Companies often make expenditures that benefit more than one period. • These costs are debited to an asset account. • At the end of the accounting period, the amount of the asset that has been used is transferred from the asset account to an expense account. • Prepaid expenses are costs that companies pay in advance, such as rent, supplies, and insurance.

  10. Example(Accrued Expenses) • At the end of an accounting period, some expenses incurred during the period have not been recorded. These expenses require adjusting entries. Examples include: • Interest on borrowed money • Wages • Utilities • These expenses are called accrued expenses because, as the expense and the corresponding liability accumulate, they are said to accrue.

  11. Exercise A business has earned $5,000 of revenues, but they are not recorded as of the end of the accounting period. Accrued Revenues

  12. Types of Adjusting Entries

  13. Exercise • On December 31, 2011, Krug Company reported pretax income of $120,000 prior to the following adjusting entries: Depreciation expense was $31,000; Accrued service revenues totaled $29,000; Accrued expenses totaled $12,000; Expired insurance which was prepaid totaled $9,000; Rent revenue earned was $7,000; the rent was prepaid by the tenant and credited to unearned rent revenue.How much is Krug's pretax income after adjusting entries?   

  14. The Answer Income of $120,000 - Depreciation expense $31,000 + Accrued revenues $29,000 - Accrued expenses $12,000 - prepaid insurance $9,000 + Rent revenue earned $7,000 = 104,000 Income after adjusting entries = 104,000

More Related