Introduction: From Transactions to Ledger
Accounting records the financial effects of business activities so that results (profit/loss) and financial position (assets, liabilities, capital) can be known clearly.
This chapter explains recording of transactions – how a transaction moves from a source document to journal and finally to ledger through the double entry system.
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Business Transactions, Source Documents and Vouchers
Business Transaction
A business transaction is any event that:
- Involves give-and-take of economic value.
- Can be measured in money.
- Affects the financial position of the business.
Example: Buying a computer for ₹ 35,000 in cash – cash is given, computer is received.
Source Documents
Business transactions are supported by documents such as:
- Cash memo
- Invoice or bill
- Pay-in-slip
- Cheque
- Salary slip
- Manually prepared voucher (for petty expenses, etc.)
These documents:
- Provide proof that a transaction occurred.
- Are arranged in chronological order and serially numbered.
- Form the basis for recording in the books of accounts.
Accounting Vouchers
An accounting voucher is a written document that shows:
- Which account is debited and which is credited.
- The amount of the transaction.
- Date, narration and authorisation.
Types of Vouchers:
- Simple (Transaction) Voucher
- One debit and one credit.
- Compound Voucher
- More than one debit and one credit in total, but in one direction only (e.g. many debits, one credit, or one debit, many credits).
- Often called Debit Voucher or Credit Voucher.
- Complex / Journal Voucher
- Multiple debits and multiple credits.
Essential elements of a voucher:
- Name of firm.
- Date of transaction.
- Voucher number in serial order.
- Accounts to be debited/credited.
- Amount in figures.
- Brief description (narration).
- Signature of preparer and authorised person.
Accounting Equation and Its Applications
Basic Equation
The accounting equation expresses the fundamental relationship:
Assets = Liabilities + Capital
or
Assets – Liabilities = Capital
Assets – Capital = Liabilities
Where:
- Assets: Resources owned by the business (cash, bank, stock, furniture, plant, debtors, etc.).
- Liabilities: Obligations to outsiders (creditors, loans, outstanding expenses, etc.).
- Capital: Owner’s claim on the business (owner’s investment plus profits minus losses and drawings).
Because it reflects the balance sheet relationship, it is also called the Balance Sheet Equation.
Example: Starting a Business
Rohit starts business with cash ₹ 5,00,000.
Balance sheet:
- Assets: Cash in hand ₹ 5,00,000
- Capital: ₹ 5,00,000
- Liabilities: Nil
So: Assets 5,00,000 = Liabilities 0 + Capital 5,00,000.
Effect of Transactions on the Equation (Illustrative)
Consider these transactions in Rohit’s business:
- Opened bank account with ₹ 4,80,000.
- Cash decreases by 4,80,000, Bank increases by 4,80,000.
- Total assets remain the same; liabilities and capital unchanged.
- Bought furniture for ₹ 60,000 by cheque.
- Furniture increases by 60,000, Bank decreases by 60,000.
- Total assets unchanged.
- Bought plant and machinery worth ₹ 1,25,000, paid ₹ 10,000 cash and balance later to Ramjee Lal.
- Plant & Machinery +1,25,000; Cash –10,000.
- Creditors (liability) +1,15,000.
- Purchased goods on credit from Sumit Traders ₹ 55,000.
- Stock (goods) +55,000; Creditors (liability) +55,000.
- Sold goods costing ₹ 25,000 to Rajani Enterprises for ₹ 35,000 on credit.
- Stock –25,000; Debtors (Rajani Enterprises) +35,000; Capital +10,000 (profit).
After all these, the final balance sheet is:
- Total Assets: ₹ 6,80,000
- Total Liabilities: ₹ 1,70,000
- Capital: ₹ 5,10,000
And the equation still holds: Assets = Liabilities + Capital = 6,80,000.
This shows that every transaction maintains the equality of the accounting equation.
Rules of Debit and Credit (Class 11)
In double entry accounting:
- Every transaction affects at least two accounts.
- Total debits always equal total credits.
T–Account
A T–account is a simple form of account:
- Left side: Debit (Dr.)
- Right side: Credit (Cr.)
Classification of Accounts (Modern Approach)
Accounts are classified into five categories:
- Assets
- Liabilities
- Capital
- Expenses/Losses
- Revenues/Gains
Rules of Debit and Credit
- Assets and Expenses/Losses
- Increase in asset → Debit
- Decrease in asset → Credit
- Increase in expense/loss → Debit
- Decrease in expense/loss → Credit
- Liabilities, Capital and Revenues/Gains
- Increase in liability → Credit
- Decrease in liability → Debit
- Increase in capital → Credit
- Decrease in capital → Debit
- Increase in revenue/gain → Credit
- Decrease in revenue/gain → Debit
Summary table:
| Category | Increase | Decrease |
|---|---|---|
| Asset | Debit | Credit |
| Liability | Credit | Debit |
| Capital | Credit | Debit |
| Expense / Loss | Debit | Credit |
| Revenue / Gain | Credit | Debit |
Application Examples
- Started business with cash ₹ 5,00,000.
- Cash (asset) increases → Debit.
- Capital increases → Credit.
- Cash A/c Dr. 5,00,000
To Capital A/c 5,00,000
- Opened bank account with ₹ 4,80,000.
- Bank (asset) increases → Debit.
- Cash (asset) decreases → Credit.
- Bank A/c Dr. 4,80,000
To Cash A/c 4,80,000
- Paid store rent in cash ₹ 2,500.
- Rent (expense) increases → Debit.
- Cash (asset) decreases → Credit.
- Rent A/c Dr. 2,500
To Cash A/c 2,500
- Paid salaries in cash ₹ 5,000.
- Salary (expense) increases → Debit.
- Cash decreases → Credit.
- Salary A/c Dr. 5,000
To Cash A/c 5,000
- Received cheque from debtor and deposited into bank.
- Bank (asset) increases → Debit.
- Debtor (asset) decreases → Credit.
- Bank A/c Dr.
To Debtor’s A/c
Journal – Book of Original Entry
Meaning and Purpose
Journal is the book in which transactions are recorded first, in chronological (date-wise) order, using debit and credit rules.
From the journal, entries are later posted to ledger accounts.
Format of Journal
| Date | Particulars | L.F. | Debit Amount (₹) | Credit Amount (₹) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Key points:
- Date: Date of transaction.
- Particulars:
- First line – account to be debited, with “Dr.” at the end.
- Second line – “To” followed by account to be credited.
- Narration below describing the transaction.
- L.F. (Ledger Folio): Page number of ledger where the account appears (filled at the time of posting).
- Amount: Debit and credit columns must always total equally.
At the end of each journal page, totals are carried forward (c/f) and brought forward (b/f) on the next page.
Simple Journal Entry
When only two accounts are affected.
Example: Goods purchased on credit from Govind Traders for ₹ 30,000.
- Purchases (expense) increases → Debit.
- Govind Traders (creditor) increases → Credit.
Journal:
- Purchases A/c Dr. 30,000
To Govind Traders A/c 30,000
(Goods purchased on credit from Govind Traders)
Compound Journal Entry
When more than two accounts are involved.
Example: Office furniture purchased for ₹ 25,000 from Modern Furnitures, paid ₹ 5,000 in cash, balance payable.
- Furniture (asset) increases 25,000 → Debit.
- Cash decreases 5,000 → Credit.
- Modern Furnitures (creditor) increases 20,000 → Credit.
Journal:
- Office Furniture A/c Dr. 25,000
To Cash A/c 5,000
To Modern Furniture A/c 20,000
(Office furniture purchased, part payment in cash, balance payable)
Illustration: Journal Entries for a Month
Example set (Saroj Mart) includes transactions like:
- Business started with cash.
- Goods purchased on credit and for cash.
- Opening bank account.
- Credit sales and receipts by cheque.
- Expenses like rent, insurance, furniture purchase.
- Drawings by proprietor.
- Interest received, commission paid, telephone bill and salaries.
All are recorded in journal applying the rules of debit and credit.
Ledger – Principal Book of Accounts
Meaning
Ledger is the principal book where all accounts are kept.
All transactions recorded in the journal are classified and posted account-wise in the ledger.
Importance of Ledger
- Provides complete information about each account (e.g. total sales, total purchases).
- Shows balances of debtors, creditors, cash, bank etc.
- Helps to prepare Trial Balance and Final Accounts.
- Summarises transactions in a classified form.
Format of a Ledger Account
Name of Account
Dr. Cr.
| Date | Particulars | J.F. | Amount (₹) | Date | Particulars | J.F. | Amount (₹) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
- Date: Date of posting.
- Particulars: Name of the corresponding account from the journal.
- J.F.: Journal Folio, page number where the entry appears.
- Amount: On debit or credit side.
Posting from Journal to Ledger
Posting is the process of transferring entries from journal to ledger:
- Identify the account debited in the journal.
- In that ledger account, record the date on the debit side, write the name of the credited account in Particulars, enter the journal page in J.F. and amount in debit column.
- Identify the account credited in the journal.
- In that ledger account, record the date on the credit side, write the name of the debited account in Particulars, and enter amount in credit column with J.F.
Example: Furniture bought by cheque for ₹ 60,000.
Journal:
- Furniture A/c Dr. 60,000
To Bank A/c 60,000
(Furniture purchased by cheque)
Ledger posting:
Furniture A/c
| Date | Particulars | J.F. | Amount (₹) |
|---|---|---|---|
| … | Bank | … | 60,000 |
Bank A/c
| Date | Particulars | J.F. | Amount (₹) |
|---|---|---|---|
| … | Furniture | … | 60,000 (Cr.) |
The chapter gives complete ledger postings for full illustrations (e.g. Rohit, Sita Ram) to show how balances are built.
Types of Ledger Accounts
- Permanent Accounts
- Assets, Liabilities, Capital.
- Balances are carried forward to next year.
- Appear in the balance sheet.
- Temporary Accounts
- Revenues/Gains, Expenses/Losses.
- Closed at the end of year.
- Transferred to Trading and Profit & Loss Account.
Journal vs Ledger
| Basis | Journal | Ledger |
|---|---|---|
| Nature | Book of original entry | Principal book of accounts |
| Order of recording | Chronological (date-wise) | Analytical (account-wise) |
| Purpose | Initial recording of transactions | Classification and summarisation |
| Process | Journalising | Posting |
| Role in final accounts | Provides raw data | Used to prepare trial balance and final a/cs |
CBSE-Style GST Journal Entries (Basic Level)
Under GST, tax components are recorded in separate accounts.
- Input CGST / Input SGST / Input IGST – tax paid on purchases or expenses.
- Output CGST / Output SGST / Output IGST – tax collected on sales.
Example (within same state, CGST 5%, SGST 5%):
- Bought goods on credit for ₹ 1,00,000 plus CGST 5% and SGST 5%.
- Purchases A/c Dr. 1,00,000
- Input CGST A/c Dr. 5,000
- Input SGST A/c Dr. 5,000
To Creditors A/c 1,10,000
- Sold goods on credit for ₹ 1,35,000 plus CGST 5% and SGST 5%.
- Debtors A/c Dr. 1,48,500
To Sales A/c 1,35,000
To Output CGST A/c 6,750
To Output SGST A/c 6,750
- Paid railway transport charges ₹ 8,000 plus CGST 5% and SGST 5%.
- Carriage/Transport Charges A/c Dr. 8,000
- Input CGST A/c Dr. 400
- Input SGST A/c Dr. 400
To Bank/Cash A/c 8,800
At the time of GST payment, total output tax is set off against total input tax; remaining liability is paid via Electronic Cash Ledger.
Exam Tips and Further Practice
- Always start by identifying types of accounts (asset, liability, capital, expense, income).
- Decide which accounts increase and which decrease, then apply debit–credit rules.
- In accounting equation questions, prepare a neat table showing total assets and total of liabilities plus capital after each transaction.
- For journal entries, write clear narrations; for ledger, post carefully and then balance the accounts.
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Quick Self-Test (Answer Mentally)
- Increase in an asset – debit or credit?
- Goods purchased on credit – which two accounts?
- Journal or ledger: which is book of original entry?
- Wages – asset, liability, capital, expense or income?
- Credit sale to Sohan – which account is debited?
(Answers: 1–Debit, 2–Purchases & Creditor, 3–Journal, 4–Expense, 5–Sohan A/c.)
Interactive Quiz
Recording of Transactions – Accounting Equation, Journal & Ledger
Test your understanding with the interactive quiz below, and quickly check how well you remember the key concepts and terms.
Question Bank – Recording of Transactions (Class 11)
Use this as a standalone practice post. All questions include answers.
I. Very Short Answer Questions (1 mark)
- Define accounting equation.
Answer:
Accounting equation is the statement that shows:
Assets = Liabilities + Capital. - What is a source document?
Answer:
A source document is any original business document (like invoice, cash memo, cheque, voucher) that provides proof of a transaction and is used as the basis for recording it. - Give one example of a business transaction.
Answer:
Buying goods for cash ₹ 10,000 is a business transaction. - Name the book in which transactions are first recorded.
Answer:
Journal (book of original entry). - What is meant by posting?
Answer:
Posting is the process of transferring entries from the journal (or other books of original entry) to the respective ledger accounts. - Which side of a T‑account is called debit?
Answer:
The left side of a T‑account is called the debit (Dr.) side. - State the rule for increase in an asset.
Answer:
Increase in an asset is debited. - State the rule for increase in a liability.
Answer:
Increase in a liability is credited. - What is a compound journal entry?
Answer:
A compound journal entry is one in which more than two accounts are involved (multiple debits and/or multiple credits in one entry). - Name any two books of original entry other than journal proper.
Answer:
Cash book and sales book (sales journal). - Are revenue accounts permanent or temporary?
Answer:
Revenue accounts are temporary accounts. - What is the other name of the accounting equation?
Answer:
Balance Sheet Equation. - Which account is credited when capital is introduced?
Answer:
Capital Account is credited. - Which account is debited when salary is paid in cash?
Answer:
Salary (or Salaries) Account is debited. - What is a ledger?
Answer:
Ledger is the principal book of accounts where all accounts are kept and all entries from the journal are posted account-wise.
II. Short Answer Questions (2–3 marks)
- Why are source documents important in accounting?
Answer:
Source documents are important because:- They provide reliable evidence that a transaction actually took place.
- They help in recording correct amounts, dates and parties involved.
- They act as proof for audit, legal verification and future reference.
- State the rules of debit and credit for assets and liabilities.
Answer:- Assets:
- Increase → Debit
- Decrease → Credit
- Liabilities:
- Increase → Credit
- Decrease → Debit
- Assets:
- Distinguish between simple and compound journal entry (any two points).
Answer:- Simple entry: involves only one account debited and one account credited; compound entry: involves more than two accounts.
- Simple entries are for straightforward transactions; compound entries record complex transactions with multiple debits/credits in a single entry.
- Why is the journal called the book of original entry?
Answer:
Journal is called the book of original entry because every transaction is recorded in it first, in chronological order, based on source documents, before being posted to ledger accounts. - Why do liability and capital accounts follow the same rules of debit and credit?
Answer:
Both liabilities and capital represent claims against the assets of the business. Therefore, an increase in either is credited and a decrease is debited, so they follow the same debit–credit rules. - Classify the following into asset, liability, capital, expense or income:
Building, Wages, Sales, Bank loan, Prepaid rent, Outstanding salary.
Answer:- Building – Asset
- Wages – Expense
- Sales – Income (Revenue)
- Bank loan – Liability
- Prepaid rent – Asset
- Outstanding salary – Liability
- What is meant by permanent and temporary accounts? Give one example of each.
Answer:- Permanent accounts: Their balances are carried forward to the next accounting year; example – Building Account.
- Temporary accounts: Closed at year-end, and their balances are transferred to Trading and Profit & Loss Account; example – Rent Account.
- Write the rule of debit and credit for expenses and revenues.
Answer:- Expenses/Losses: Increase → Debit, Decrease → Credit.
- Revenues/Gains: Increase → Credit, Decrease → Debit.
III. Short Numerical Questions (3–4 marks)
- Question:
Prepare the accounting equation from the following transactions of A:
(a) Started business with cash ₹ 2,00,000.
(b) Purchased goods for cash ₹ 40,000.
(c) Sold goods costing ₹ 10,000 to Bhanu for ₹ 12,000 on credit.
(d) Bought furniture on credit ₹ 7,000. Answer (working and final equation): Step-by-step effect:- (a) Capital introduced:
Assets: Cash 2,00,000
Capital: 2,00,000 - (b) Purchased goods for cash 40,000:
Cash decreases 40,000, Goods (Stock) increases 40,000.
Assets: Cash 1,60,000; Stock 40,000; Capital 2,00,000 - (c) Sold goods costing 10,000 for 12,000 on credit:
Stock decreases 10,000, Debtors increase 12,000, profit 2,000 increases capital.
Assets: Cash 1,60,000; Stock 30,000; Debtors 12,000
Capital: 2,02,000 - (d) Bought furniture on credit 7,000:
Furniture (asset) increases 7,000; Creditors (liability) increase 7,000.
Assets: Cash 1,60,000; Stock 30,000; Debtors 12,000; Furniture 7,000 = 2,09,000
Liabilities: Creditors 7,000
Capital: 2,02,000
Assets ₹ 2,09,000 = Liabilities ₹ 7,000 + Capital ₹ 2,02,000. - (a) Capital introduced:
- Question:
State the effect (increase/decrease and debit/credit) of the following transactions:
(a) Paid salary in cash ₹ 5,000.
(b) Bought furniture for cash ₹ 10,000. Answer:
(a) Salary paid:- Salary (expense) increases → Debit Salary A/c.
- Cash (asset) decreases → Credit Cash A/c.
- Furniture (asset) increases → Debit Furniture A/c.
- Cash (asset) decreases → Credit Cash A/c.
- Question:
Classify each of the following and state which side they increase on:
Capital, Cash, Purchases, Sales, Wages, Creditors. Answer:- Capital – Capital account, increases on credit side.
- Cash – Asset, increases on debit side.
- Purchases – Expense, increases on debit side.
- Sales – Revenue, increases on credit side.
- Wages – Expense, increases on debit side.
- Creditors – Liability, increases on credit side.
IV. Long Answer Questions (5–6 marks)
- Question:
Explain how debits and credits are used to analyse and record business transactions. Give suitable examples. Answer:- First, classify each account affected by a transaction as asset, liability, capital, expense or income.
- Next, determine whether each account increases or decreases as a result of the transaction.
- Apply the modern rules:
- Assets and expenses: increase → debit, decrease → credit.
- Liabilities, capital and income: increase → credit, decrease → debit.
- For every transaction, total amount debited must equal total amount credited.
Examples: - Started business with cash ₹ 1,00,000: Cash (asset ↑, debit), Capital (capital ↑, credit).
Entry: Cash A/c Dr. 1,00,000
To Capital A/c 1,00,000 - Paid rent in cash ₹ 5,000: Rent (expense ↑, debit), Cash (asset ↓, credit).
Entry: Rent A/c Dr. 5,000
To Cash A/c 5,000
- Question:
Describe the format of a journal and show how transactions are recorded with examples. Answer:- Journal has the following main columns: Date, Particulars, L.F., Debit Amount (₹), Credit Amount (₹).
- The date of transaction is recorded in the Date column.
- In Particulars:
- The account to be debited is written on the first line with the word “Dr.”.
- The account to be credited is written on the next line with the word “To” before it.
- A brief narration is written below explaining the transaction.
- L.F. (ledger folio) is filled later when posting to ledger.
- Debit and credit amounts are written in their respective amount columns, ensuring equality.
Example 1: Goods purchased on credit from Ritu ₹ 20,000. - Purchases A/c Dr. 20,000
To Ritu A/c 20,000
(Goods purchased on credit)
Example 2: Rent paid in cash ₹ 2,000. - Rent A/c Dr. 2,000
To Cash A/c 2,000
(Rent paid in cash)
- Question:
“Accounting equation remains intact under all circumstances.” Justify this statement with a suitable example involving at least five transactions. Answer (example outline):
Suppose X starts business:
(1) Started business with cash ₹ 3,00,000.
(2) Deposited in bank ₹ 2,00,000.
(3) Purchased goods for cash ₹ 50,000.
(4) Purchased furniture on credit ₹ 20,000.
(5) Sold goods costing ₹ 30,000 for ₹ 40,000 for cash.- After each transaction, update assets (cash, bank, stock, furniture), liabilities (creditors) and capital (including profit).
- You will find at each stage: Total Assets = Total Liabilities + Capital.
- For example, after all above:
Assets: Cash, Bank, Stock, Furniture (total say ₹ X)
Liabilities: Creditors ₹ 20,000
Capital: Original capital plus profit (original 3,00,000 + profit 10,000 – drawings if any)
The equality holds at every step, proving the statement.
- Question:
Explain ledger, its format and the process of posting entries from the journal with an example. Answer:- Ledger is the principal book where all individual accounts are maintained (e.g. Cash A/c, Bank A/c, Capital A/c, Purchases A/c, etc.).
- Standard ledger format (T‑format) has two sides – debit and credit – with columns for Date, Particulars, Journal Folio and Amount on each side.
- Posting from journal to ledger:
- Identify the accounts debited and credited in the journal.
- In the ledger account that is debited, enter the date on the debit side and in Particulars write the name of the credited account with reference to the journal.
- In the ledger account that is credited, enter the date on the credit side and in Particulars write the name of the debited account.
- Example: Furniture purchased by cheque for ₹ 10,000.
Journal:
Furniture A/c Dr. 10,000
To Bank A/c 10,000
(Furniture purchased by cheque)
Ledger posting:
Furniture A/c (debit side):
Date – Particulars: Bank A/c – Amount 10,000
Bank A/c (credit side):
Date – Particulars: Furniture A/c – Amount 10,000
V. Assertion–Reason Questions (with Answers)
Choose the correct option:
a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
b) Both A and R are true, but R is not the correct explanation of A.
c) A is true but R is false.
d) A is false but R is true.
- Assertion (A): Every transaction affects at least two accounts in double entry system.
Reason (R): For every debit, there is an equal and corresponding credit.
Answer: a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A. - Assertion (A): Capital is credited when a business earns profit.
Reason (R): Profit increases the owner’s claim on the business.
Answer: a) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A. - Assertion (A): Journal is called the principal book of accounts.
Reason (R): All transactions are first recorded in the journal.
Answer: c) A is true but R is false – journal is book of original entry; the principal book is the ledger. - Assertion (A): Revenue accounts are permanent accounts.
Reason (R): Their balances are carried forward to the next period.
Answer: d) A is false but R is also false – revenue accounts are temporary and closed at year-end. - Assertion (A): Increase in an asset is always credited.
Reason (R): Assets and expenses follow the same rule of debit and credit.
Answer: d) Both A and R are false – increase in asset is debited; assets and expenses are both debited when they increase.
How to Use This Question Bank Effectively
- Follow the order of difficulty
- Start with Very Short Answer questions to revise basic definitions and concepts.
- Move to Short Answer questions to strengthen understanding.
- Attempt Numerical, Long Answer, Assertion–Reason and Case-Based questions once concepts are clear.
- Active recall first, then check answers
- Cover the answer section with your hand/paper.
- Try to write or speak the answer yourself.
- Only then compare with the given answer and correct your mistakes.
- Use as a self-test before exams
- A few days before your test, solve the entire set like a mock paper.
- Mark questions you got wrong; revise only those topics again (e.g. accounting equation, journal formats, posting to ledger).
- Practice journal and ledger vertically
- For journal questions: write full formats, not just bare entries.
- For case-based questions:
- Step 1: Identify type of account (asset/liability/capital/expense/income).
- Step 2: Decide debit/credit.
- Step 3: Write the journal entry.
- Step 4: Optionally, post 2–3 entries into ledger accounts for extra practice.
- Use Assertion–Reason to test concepts, not memory
- Read Assertion and Reason separately.
- Decide if each is true or false independently.
- Then decide whether Reason actually explains Assertion.
- This improves conceptual clarity about debit–credit rules, types of accounts, and purpose of books.
- Re-attempt after a gap
- After 5–7 days, attempt the same question bank again without looking at previous answers.
- If you now score full marks, your preparation on “Recording of Transactions – Accounting Equation, Journal & Ledger” is strong.
- Link with other resources
- After solving these questions, try online chapter-wise quizzes and more case studies to simulate MCQs and mixed-format CBSE papers.
- You can use platforms like the Student Zone at GrowInJob for more practice sets and interactive quizzes.



