Cash is "not" a credit in accounting. The cash account is an asset and is a debit balance account. To increase the cash account you debit the account and to decrease it you credit it.Cash = Current Asset = Debit Balance(GAAP)
Assets are a debit account and are increased with a debit. Cash goes up with a debit, Inventory, Accounts Receivable, etc. Any asset account will increase with a Debit.Liabilities increase with a Credit as do Owners Equity.One key note, do not confuse Depreciation with an asset account, it can be easily done as you list depreciation under the assets along with it's corresponding account, depreciation is what you call a Contra-Asset Account.
That depends, it could be either. a contra-asset account would be just the opposite of an asset. All assets have a debit balance (increase with debit) therefore a contra-asset account would be a credit. The same holds true with a contra-liability account, it is just the opposite, a liability maintains a credit balance (increases with a credit) therefore a contra-liability account would be a debit.
Accounts receivable is a debit.Answer:Accounts receivable is an asset and therefore maintains a debit balance. This is an account listing what a person or company owes you, or money that you expect to receive. Since it is an asset (all assets maintain a debit balance) it means to increase the account you debit it and to decrease it (when a payment is made by the customer) you credit it.Assets = debit balance (increase with debit, decrease with credit)Liabilities and Owners Equity = credit balance (increase with a credit, decrease with a debit)(GAAP)
Inventory is an asset, and so it is a debit to increase, and a credit to decrease.
Cash is "not" a credit in accounting. The cash account is an asset and is a debit balance account. To increase the cash account you debit the account and to decrease it you credit it.Cash = Current Asset = Debit Balance(GAAP)
Assets are a debit account and are increased with a debit. Cash goes up with a debit, Inventory, Accounts Receivable, etc. Any asset account will increase with a Debit.Liabilities increase with a Credit as do Owners Equity.One key note, do not confuse Depreciation with an asset account, it can be easily done as you list depreciation under the assets along with it's corresponding account, depreciation is what you call a Contra-Asset Account.
That depends, it could be either. a contra-asset account would be just the opposite of an asset. All assets have a debit balance (increase with debit) therefore a contra-asset account would be a credit. The same holds true with a contra-liability account, it is just the opposite, a liability maintains a credit balance (increases with a credit) therefore a contra-liability account would be a debit.
That depends, it could be either. a contra-asset account would be just the opposite of an asset. All assets have a debit balance (increase with debit) therefore a contra-asset account would be a credit. The same holds true with a contra-liability account, it is just the opposite, a liability maintains a credit balance (increases with a credit) therefore a contra-liability account would be a debit.
Accounts receivable is a debit.Answer:Accounts receivable is an asset and therefore maintains a debit balance. This is an account listing what a person or company owes you, or money that you expect to receive. Since it is an asset (all assets maintain a debit balance) it means to increase the account you debit it and to decrease it (when a payment is made by the customer) you credit it.Assets = debit balance (increase with debit, decrease with credit)Liabilities and Owners Equity = credit balance (increase with a credit, decrease with a debit)(GAAP)
[Debit] Accululated Depreciation xxxx [Debit] Loss on disposal of asset xxxx [Credit] Asset account xxxx Entry 2 [debit] Profit and loss account xxxx [Credit] Loss on disposal of asset xxxx
Inventory is an asset, and so it is a debit to increase, and a credit to decrease.
increase the balance of the liability account :)
Capital is a Credit Balance account. To increase capital and therefore increase OE, you will Credit the account. Not DEBIT. You Debit Cash, Credit Capital.
[Debit] Depreciation account [Credit] Asset account
Drawings A/c (debit) TO Asset A/c (credit)
Example of journal entries are as follows: 1 - Start of business [Debit] Cash /bank / goods [Credit] owners equity 2 - Purchase of asset [Debit] Asset account [Credit] Cash / bank 3 - Increase of capital [Debit] Cash / bank [Credit] Owners equity 4 - Decrease in capital [Debit] Treasury Stock [Credit] Cash / bank