How to properly replenish petty cash has been a surce of confusion for many small business owners. As a practicing accountant, I find clients making the same mistake constantly, and it come from not understanding the full concept of petty cash. The concept is not difficult to understand; you just need to make sure you understand it.
First, think about what you are doing. You take a certain amount of money out of the bank; let’s say $100, and put it into a cash box. Remember, that the general ledger account, Cash-in-Bank, is an asset. An asset, you may recall, if you have taken my Accounting for Non-Accountants course, is an unused economic resource that your business owns (has possession or controf of). All you have done, is shift $100 from Cash-in Bank to another asset account called Petty Cash. You deplete the cash in the box when you purchase such items as postage, office supplies, meals, gas for an auto, etc. When most of the cash is gone, you must replenish the fund. You do that by withdrawing more cash from the bank for the amount that has been depleted; let’s say $92.50. You should have $92.50 in receipts for expenses in the box. Those expenses are posted to their respective categories and the offset is, of course, Cash. Here is the journal entry:
DESCRIPTION DEBIT CREDITPostage 37.00Office 14.50Meals 36.50Auto 15.00 Cash 92.50The mistake occurs when you try to do this:
DESCRIPTION DEBIT CREDITPetty Cash 92.50 Cash 92.50If you went with this second journal entry, you would end up with $192.50 in the Petty Cash account, which is an asset on your balance sheet, and zero in the expense accounts for postage, office, meals, and auto. This doesn’t seem right, does it? If you audited the petty cash box you would not find $192.50 in cash, vouchers and receipts. You would only find $100.00. The Petty Cash amount remains the same as originally established, unless you purposefully decide to increase it. Otherwise, petty cash expenditures must be recorded to their appropriate expense categories.
Go to the articles section of the blog to read my article, “Why Petty Cash” to find out why using a petty cash fund is a good accounting practice.
Niciun comentariu:
Trimiteți un comentariu