Beancount.io LogoBeancount.io

41 tagged with "Accounting Basics"

Foundational accounting concepts, terminology, and principles for small business owners

View all tags

Cash vs. Accrual Accounting: How to Choose the Right Method (and When the IRS Forces Your Hand)
·mike

Cash vs. Accrual Accounting: How to Choose the Right Method (and When the IRS Forces Your Hand)

Cash accounting records revenue when money is received and expenses when paid; accrual accounting records revenue when earned and expenses when incurred. IRS Section 448 mandates the accrual method once a business's three-year average gross receipts exceed the $32 million threshold for 2026, and changing methods later requires Form 3115 plus a Section 481(a) adjustment.

accounting-basics
accrual-accounting
revenue-recognition
tax-compliance
+4
Consignment Accounting: Who Owns the Goods, and Who Books the Sale
·mike

Consignment Accounting: Who Owns the Goods, and Who Books the Sale

In a consignment arrangement the consignor owns the goods and reports the full retail sale plus the commission expense; the consignee is an agent and books only its commission as revenue. Goods stay on the consignor's balance sheet until the end customer buys them.

consignment-accounting
inventory
revenue-recognition
bookkeeping
+3
Undeposited Funds Explained: How the Holding Account Works and How to Clear a Stuck Balance
·mike

Undeposited Funds Explained: How the Holding Account Works and How to Clear a Stuck Balance

Undeposited funds is a temporary asset account that holds customer payments between receipt and bank deposit, letting individual receipts match a lump-sum bank line. This guide covers the three-step journal pattern, four common ways stuck balances accumulate, and three cleanup methods that preserve audit history.

bookkeeping
accounting-basics
reconciliation
accounts-receivable
+4
Accrued Payroll: The Month-End Journal Entry for Wages Earned but Not Yet Paid
·mike

Accrued Payroll: The Month-End Journal Entry for Wages Earned but Not Yet Paid

Accrued payroll records wages, taxes, and PTO employees earned before period-end but are paid after it. Learn how to calculate the accrual, post the month-end journal entry, and reverse it next month to avoid double-counting.

payroll
accrual-accounting
journal-entries
adjusting-entries
+3
From Cash to Accrual Without a Tax Shock: Form 3115, Section 481(a), and the De Minimis Safe Harbor
·mike

From Cash to Accrual Without a Tax Shock: Form 3115, Section 481(a), and the De Minimis Safe Harbor

A small-business guide to the forced cash-to-accrual switch: how Form 3115 works, how the Section 481(a) catch-up is calculated and spread over four years, and why the de minimis safe harbor is an annual election rather than a method change.

tax-compliance
accrual-accounting
small-business
tax-planning
+4
Gain or Loss on Asset Disposal: How to Record Selling, Scrapping, or Trading In Business Equipment
·mike

Gain or Loss on Asset Disposal: How to Record Selling, Scrapping, or Trading In Business Equipment

When a business sells, scraps, or trades in a fixed asset, gain or loss equals proceeds minus book value — both the asset cost and its accumulated depreciation must be cleared, and Section 1245 recapture taxes the gain as ordinary income on Form 4797.

accounting-basics
bookkeeping
journal-entries
assets
+3
Lower of Cost or Net Realizable Value: How to Write Down Obsolete Inventory
·mike

Lower of Cost or Net Realizable Value: How to Write Down Obsolete Inventory

LCNRV requires reporting inventory at the lower of its cost or net realizable value (NRV = selling price − completion costs − selling costs). Once written down under U.S. GAAP, inventory cannot be written back up.

inventory
accounting-basics
financial-reporting
tax
+3
Lower of Cost or Net Realizable Value (LCNRV): How to Write Down Obsolete Inventory and Stop Overstating Your Balance Sheet
·mike

Lower of Cost or Net Realizable Value (LCNRV): How to Write Down Obsolete Inventory and Stop Overstating Your Balance Sheet

A practical walkthrough of the LCNRV rule under ASC 330 — how to calculate net realizable value, book the write-down, handle obsolete or damaged inventory, and avoid the phantom-profit trap of overstated inventory on the balance sheet.

inventory
accounting-basics
financial-reporting
balance-sheet
+4
Opening Balance Equity: How to Set Up Books Mid-Year and Zero It Out
·mike

Opening Balance Equity: How to Set Up Books Mid-Year and Zero It Out

Opening Balance Equity is a temporary holding account that must read $0.00 once setup is done. This guide explains why it appears, how to set up books mid-year from a trial balance, and the exact journal entry to move the residual into Retained Earnings or Owner's Equity.

accounting-basics
equity-instruments
bookkeeping
journal-entries
+4
Opening Balances Done Right: Mid-Year Setup and Clearing the OBE Account
·mike

Opening Balances Done Right: Mid-Year Setup and Clearing the OBE Account

Opening Balance Equity is the suspense account accounting software creates to keep the balance sheet in balance during migration. Build a supportable opening trial balance, reconcile every account at the cutover date, then journal OBE into Retained Earnings, Owner's Capital, or Common Stock and Additional Paid-in Capital based on entity type.

bookkeeping
migration
journal-entries
balance-sheet
+4
Sales Returns, Allowances, and Contra-Revenue Accounting: How to Record Refunds Without Inflating Your Gross Margin
·mike

Sales Returns, Allowances, and Contra-Revenue Accounting: How to Record Refunds Without Inflating Your Gross Margin

A walkthrough of how to record sales returns, allowances, and discounts as contra-revenue accounts under ASC 606, including the refund liability journal entries, sales tax reversal, and the gross-margin effects most small businesses miss.

revenue-recognition
journal-entries
e-commerce
bookkeeping
+4
Suspense Accounts: How to Park Unidentified Transactions and Still Close on Time
·mike

Suspense Accounts: How to Park Unidentified Transactions and Still Close on Time

A suspense account is a temporary ledger account that holds an unidentified transaction or an unexplained trial-balance difference so the month-end close can finish on time. This guide covers when to use one, how to record and clear the entries, and how it differs from a clearing account.

bookkeeping
month-end-close
accounting-basics
journal-entries
+3
Showing 1–12 of 41 posts
1 / 4Next