35 tagged with "Journal Entries"
Master journal entry creation and accounting transactions
Wedding and Event Venue Bookkeeping: Deferred Revenue, Pass-Through Catering, and Per-Saturday Profitability
A practical guide to bookkeeping for wedding and event venues, covering ASC 606 deferred revenue on booking deposits, the principal-versus-agent test for pass-through catering and bar, refundable damage deposit liabilities, per-Saturday fixed-cost allocation, and cancellation reserves.
ASC 606 Variable Consideration and Stand-Ready Obligations: A Practical Guide
How to estimate variable consideration under ASC 606 — volume rebates, performance bonuses, royalties, and SLA penalties — choose between the expected-value and most-likely-amount methods, apply the reversal constraint correctly, distinguish a stand-ready obligation from a series of distinct services, and book journal entries that survive an audit.
Nonprofit Grant Accounting: Donor Restrictions, ASC 958, and the New Uniform Guidance Rules
A practical guide to nonprofit grant accounting under ASC 958 and the 2024 OMB Uniform Guidance updates — net asset classification, the conditional-versus-unconditional barrier test, cost-reimbursement revenue recognition, the new 15% de minimis indirect cost rate, and the $1 million Single Audit threshold.
Prepaid Expenses Explained: Stop Letting Annual Insurance, Rent, and Software Bills Distort Your Monthly Profit
How small businesses should book prepaid insurance, rent, software, and retainers — the initial entry, monthly amortization schedule, IRS 12-month rule, and a written de minimis policy that keeps monthly profit comparable and unlocks year-end tax deductions.
Accounting for SAFEs: Liability or Equity, Caps and Discounts, and What Happens at Conversion
A SAFE usually lands in the liabilities column, not equity, because it promises a variable number of shares for a fixed dollar amount. This guide explains the classification debate, the conversion math, and the journal entries from closing to conversion.
Compensated Absences Liability Under ASC 710-10: Accruing PTO, Vacation, and Sick Leave
ASC 710-10 requires employers to accrue a balance-sheet liability for PTO, vacation, and sick leave that vests or carries over. This guide covers the four-part test, sabbatical and unlimited PTO rules, the reserve calculation, and the journal entries.
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.
How to Reconcile Payment Processor Payouts: A Clearing Account Guide
A payment processor payout bundles gross sales, fees, refunds, chargebacks, sales tax, and rolling reserves into one net deposit. Route every piece through a clearing account so your books tie out to the penny and match the gross volume on your 1099-K.
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.
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.
Barter Transactions: How to Record Trades and Report Them to the IRS
Every barter trade creates taxable income equal to the fair market value of what you receive. Record it as a paired sale and expense through a barter clearing account, then report it on Schedule C—including 15.3% self-employment tax—and watch for Form 1099-B from barter exchanges.
Are Business Credit Card Rewards Taxable? How to Record Cash Back, Points, and Bonuses
For most businesses, credit card cash back and points are non-taxable rebates, not income—but a bonus with no spending requirement is taxable. Spending rewards also reduce your deductible expenses, so record them as a contra-expense to keep deductions accurate.