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Accounting Equation & Journal Entries Complete exam-ready notes

📘 JKSSB Finance & Accounts — Chapter 02

Accounting Equation & Journal Entries

Complete exam-ready notes covering the Accounting Equation, Golden Rules of Debit & Credit, Journal Format, Narration Writing, and 20+ JKSSB PYQs with answers.

⭐ HIGH PRIORITY — Heavily tested in every FAA exam
⚖️
The Accounting Equation
Assets = Liabilities + Capital (Owner's Equity)
Also written as: A = L + C
Capital = Assets − Liabilities
Liabilities = Assets − Capital

What Does Each Term Mean?

TermMeaningExamples
AssetsResources owned by the business that provide future economic benefitsCash, Bank, Debtors, Machinery, Land, Stock, Furniture
LiabilitiesObligations / amounts owed by the business to outsidersCreditors, Bank Loan, Bills Payable, Outstanding Expenses
CapitalAmount invested by the owner; net worth of the businessOwner's Capital, Retained Earnings, Reserves

Effect of Transactions on the Accounting Equation

Every business transaction affects at least two elements of the equation, yet the equation always remains balanced.

TransactionEffectEquation Balance
Owner invests ₹1,00,000 cashCash ↑, Capital ↑A ↑ = L + C ↑ ✔
Purchase machinery for ₹30,000 cashMachinery ↑, Cash ↓A ↑↓ (net 0) = L + C ✔
Took bank loan ₹50,000Bank ↑, Loan ↑A ↑ = L ↑ + C ✔
Paid creditor ₹5,000Cash ↓, Creditors ↓A ↓ = L ↓ + C ✔
Sold goods at profit ₹10,000Cash ↑, Capital ↑ (profit)A ↑ = L + C ↑ ✔
Owner withdrew cash ₹2,000 (Drawings)Cash ↓, Capital ↓A ↓ = L + C ↓ ✔
📌 Key Point — Dual Aspect Concept
Every transaction has two effects (debit & credit) of equal amounts. This is why the Accounting Equation never breaks — it is the foundation of Double Entry Book-Keeping.
🗂️
Types of Accounts
Personal Account
Persons & Organisations
  • Natural: Ram's A/c, Mohan's A/c
  • Artificial: Bank A/c, Company A/c, J&K Govt. A/c
  • Representative: Capital A/c, Drawings A/c, Outstanding Salary A/c
Real Account
Tangible & Intangible Assets
  • Tangible: Cash, Machinery, Land, Furniture, Stock
  • Intangible: Goodwill, Patents, Trademarks, Copyright
Nominal Account
Expenses, Incomes & Losses
  • Expenses/Losses: Salaries, Rent, Interest Paid, Bad Debts
  • Incomes/Gains: Commission Received, Discount Received, Interest Earned
🧠 Quick Memory Aid — Account Types
"PRN"Personal (persons), Real (resources/assets), Nominal (revenues & expenses).
Nominal accounts are temporary — they reset to zero at year-end via Profit & Loss A/c.
📜
3 Golden Rules of Debit & Credit
Account TypeDEBIT (Dr)CREDIT (Cr)
Personal AccountDebit the ReceiverCredit the Giver
Real AccountDebit what comes INCredit what goes OUT
Nominal AccountDebit all Expenses & LossesCredit all Incomes & Gains

Applying the Rules — Illustrated

Example 1 — Cash paid as wages ₹5,000

Step 1: Wages A/c → Nominal (expense) → Debit Wages A/c

Step 2: Cash A/c → Real (goes out) → Credit Cash A/c

Example 2 — Cash received from Ram (debtor) ₹8,000

Step 1: Cash A/c → Real (comes in) → Debit Cash A/c

Step 2: Ram's A/c → Personal (giver) → Credit Ram's A/c

Example 3 — Goods purchased on credit from Shyam ₹12,000

Step 1: Purchases A/c → Real (comes in) → Debit Purchases A/c

Step 2: Shyam's A/c → Personal (giver) → Credit Shyam's A/c

📔
Journal Format

The Journal (Book of Original / Prime Entry) is where every transaction is first recorded chronologically.

DateParticularsL.F.Dr. (₹)Cr. (₹)
2025
Apr 1
Cash A/c   Dr.11,00,000
To Capital A/c21,00,000
(Being cash brought in by the owner as capital)
Apr 3Purchases A/c   Dr.320,000
To Cash A/c120,000
(Being goods purchased for cash)
Apr 5Salaries A/c   Dr.48,000
To Cash A/c18,000
(Being salaries paid to employees for the month)

Components of a Journal Entry

ColumnWhat to WriteImportant Note
DateYear on first line, then month & dateChronological order; blank for same date entries
ParticularsDebited account first (with "Dr."), then credited account ("To …"), then narration in bracketsCr. account is always indented
L.F.Ledger Folio — page number in the ledgerLeft blank during journalising; filled when posted
Dr. AmountAmount to be debitedMust equal Cr. Amount
Cr. AmountAmount to be creditedMust equal Dr. Amount
NarrationBrief explanation in bracketsStarts with "Being …"; mandatory in exams
🪜
Steps to Pass a Journal Entry
  1. Identify the accounts affected — which accounts change due to this transaction?
  2. Classify each account — Personal, Real, or Nominal?
  3. Apply the Golden Rule — decide which account to Debit and which to Credit.
  4. Record in Journal format — Debit account first, Credit indented with "To", then narration.
  5. Verify — Total Debit amount = Total Credit amount.
✅ Exam Strategy
Always work through these five steps mentally before writing. In JKSSB exams, marks are awarded for correct account identification and narration even if the amount has a minor error.
✍️
Narration Writing

Narration is a brief explanation of the transaction written in brackets below each journal entry.

Rules for Writing Narrations

  • Always begins with "Being …"
  • Written in brackets ( )
  • Brief but complete — mention what happened and why (if applicable)
  • Use past tense
  • Written immediately below the credit entry

Standard Narrations for Common Transactions

TransactionStandard Narration
Owner brings in cash as capital(Being cash brought in by owner as capital)
Goods purchased for cash(Being goods purchased for cash)
Goods purchased on credit from Mohan(Being goods purchased on credit from Mohan)
Goods sold for cash(Being goods sold for cash)
Goods sold on credit to Ram(Being goods sold on credit to Ram)
Cash received from debtor Ram(Being cash received from Ram in full settlement)
Cash paid to creditor Shyam(Being cash paid to Shyam in full settlement)
Rent paid(Being rent paid for the month of ___)
Salary paid(Being salaries paid to staff for the month)
Cash deposited into bank(Being cash deposited into bank)
Cash withdrawn from bank(Being cash withdrawn from bank for office use)
Machinery purchased(Being machinery purchased for business use)
Discount allowed to debtor(Being discount allowed to Ram on settlement)
Discount received from creditor(Being discount received from Shyam on settlement)
Bad debt written off(Being amount due from X written off as bad debt)
Drawings by owner(Being cash withdrawn by owner for personal use)
Interest on capital(Being interest on capital credited at __% p.a.)
🔀
Compound Journal Entry

A Compound Journal Entry involves more than two accounts — either multiple debits, multiple credits, or both. Used when several related items are settled together.

Example — Ram settles his account of ₹10,000 by paying ₹9,500 cash; ₹500 discount allowed
DateParticularsL.F.Dr. (₹)Cr. (₹)
Cash A/c   Dr.9,500
Discount Allowed A/c   Dr.500
To Ram's A/c10,000
(Being cash received from Ram and discount allowed on settlement)
📌 Verification
Total Debit (₹9,500 + ₹500) = Total Credit (₹10,000) ✔
📝
Worked Examples — Journal Entries

Following transactions occurred in the books of M/s JK Traders during April 2025. Record them in the Journal.

DateTransactionAmount (₹)
Apr 1Started business with cash2,00,000
Apr 3Opened bank account and deposited cash50,000
Apr 5Purchased goods for cash40,000
Apr 8Purchased furniture on credit from Nathu Lal15,000
Apr 10Sold goods to Arun on credit30,000
Apr 12Received cash from Arun (₹28,000) + discount allowed (₹2,000)30,000
Apr 15Paid rent by cheque5,000
Apr 20Withdrew cash for personal use3,000
Apr 28Paid salaries in cash12,000

Journal

DateParticularsL.F.Dr. (₹)Cr. (₹)
2025
Apr 1
Cash A/c   Dr.2,00,000
To Capital A/c2,00,000
(Being cash brought in as capital by the proprietor)
Apr 3Bank A/c   Dr.50,000
To Cash A/c50,000
(Being cash deposited into bank for opening an account)
Apr 5Purchases A/c   Dr.40,000
To Cash A/c40,000
(Being goods purchased for cash)
Apr 8Furniture A/c   Dr.15,000
To Nathu Lal's A/c15,000
(Being furniture purchased on credit from Nathu Lal)
Apr 10Arun's A/c   Dr.30,000
To Sales A/c30,000
(Being goods sold on credit to Arun)
Apr 12Cash A/c   Dr.28,000
Discount Allowed A/c   Dr.2,000
To Arun's A/c30,000
(Being cash received from Arun and discount allowed on full settlement)
Apr 15Rent A/c   Dr.5,000
To Bank A/c5,000
(Being rent paid by cheque for the month)
Apr 20Drawings A/c   Dr.3,000
To Cash A/c3,000
(Being cash withdrawn by the owner for personal use)
Apr 28Salaries A/c   Dr.12,000
To Cash A/c12,000
(Being salaries paid to staff in cash for the month of April)
🔁
Frequently Tested Journal Entries — Quick Reference
#TransactionDebitCredit
1Cash introduced as capitalCash A/cCapital A/c
2Goods purchased for cashPurchases A/cCash A/c
3Goods purchased on creditPurchases A/cCreditor's A/c
4Goods sold for cashCash A/cSales A/c
5Goods sold on creditDebtor's A/cSales A/c
6Cash received from debtorCash A/cDebtor's A/c
7Cash paid to creditorCreditor's A/cCash A/c
8Rent paid in cashRent A/cCash A/c
9Salary paid by chequeSalaries A/cBank A/c
10Cash deposited into bankBank A/cCash A/c
11Cheque received from debtorBank A/cDebtor's A/c
12Machinery purchased for cashMachinery A/cCash A/c
13Depreciation on machineryDepreciation A/cMachinery A/c
14Bad debt written offBad Debts A/cDebtor's A/c
15Goods returned to supplier (Purchase Return)Creditor's A/cPurchases Return A/c
16Goods returned by customer (Sales Return)Sales Return A/cDebtor's A/c
17Drawings in cashDrawings A/cCash A/c
18Goods taken by owner for personal useDrawings A/cPurchases A/c
19Interest on capital creditedInterest on Capital A/cCapital A/c
20Commission received in cashCash A/cCommission Received A/c
21Insurance premium paidInsurance A/cCash A/c
22Outstanding salary (year-end)Salaries A/cOutstanding Salaries A/c
23Prepaid rent (year-end)Prepaid Rent A/cRent A/c
24Bank charges debited by bankBank Charges A/cBank A/c
25Loan taken from bankBank A/cBank Loan A/c
🏆
JKSSB PYQs — Accounting Equation & Journal
📢 Exam Pattern Note
JKSSB FAA exams include 5–8 MCQs and 1–2 journal questions from this chapter in every sitting. MCQs focus on Golden Rules, debit/credit identification, and narrations. Long-answer questions ask for complete journal entries with narrations.
JKSSB FAA 2022 | MCQ
Q1. Which of the following correctly states the Accounting Equation?
(A) Capital = Assets + Liabilities
(B) Assets = Liabilities + Capital
(C) Liabilities = Assets + Capital
(D) Assets = Capital − Liabilities
Answer: (B)
The fundamental accounting equation is A = L + C. This is the basis of double-entry book-keeping.
JKSSB FAA 2022 | MCQ
Q2. The rule for a Personal Account is:
(A) Debit what comes in, Credit what goes out
(B) Debit all expenses, Credit all incomes
(C) Debit the receiver, Credit the giver
(D) Debit all incomes, Credit all expenses
Answer: (C)
Golden Rule for Personal Accounts: Debit the receiver, Credit the giver.
JKSSB FAA 2023 | MCQ
Q3. When goods are purchased on credit from Ramesh, which account is credited?
(A) Purchases A/c
(B) Cash A/c
(C) Ramesh's A/c
(D) Sales A/c
Answer: (C)
Ramesh is the giver (Personal Account) → Credit the giver → Credit Ramesh's A/c. Purchases A/c is debited (Real — what comes in).
JKSSB FAA 2022 | MCQ
Q4. Which of the following is a Real Account?
(A) Rent A/c
(B) Ram's A/c
(C) Machinery A/c
(D) Salaries A/c
Answer: (C)
Machinery is a tangible asset → Real Account. Rent and Salaries are Nominal; Ram's A/c is Personal.
JKSSB FAA 2023 | MCQ
Q5. Which of the following is a Nominal Account?
(A) Cash A/c
(B) Commission Received A/c
(C) Mohan's A/c
(D) Furniture A/c
Answer: (B)
Commission Received is income → Nominal Account. Cash and Furniture are Real; Mohan's is Personal.
JKSSB FAA 2022 | MCQ
Q6. Journal is known as:
(A) Final Entry Book
(B) Book of Original Entry
(C) Secondary Entry Book
(D) None of the above
Answer: (B)
Journal is the Book of Original / Prime Entry where transactions are first recorded chronologically.
JKSSB FAA 2023 | MCQ
Q7. If assets are ₹5,00,000 and liabilities are ₹2,00,000, what is the Capital?
(A) ₹7,00,000
(B) ₹3,00,000
(C) ₹2,00,000
(D) ₹5,00,000
Answer: (B)
Capital = Assets − Liabilities = ₹5,00,000 − ₹2,00,000 = ₹3,00,000.
JKSSB FAA 2022 | MCQ
Q8. The narration in a journal entry is written:
(A) Before the debit entry
(B) Between debit and credit entries
(C) After the credit entry, within brackets
(D) In the L.F. column
Answer: (C)
Narration is always written after the credit entry in brackets, beginning with "Being…"
JKSSB FAA 2023 | MCQ
Q9. Cash withdrawn from bank for office use will be recorded as:
(A) Dr. Bank A/c, Cr. Cash A/c
(B) Dr. Drawings A/c, Cr. Bank A/c
(C) Dr. Cash A/c, Cr. Bank A/c
(D) Dr. Capital A/c, Cr. Cash A/c
Answer: (C)
Cash comes in (Real → Debit Cash A/c); Bank goes out (Real → Credit Bank A/c). Drawings A/c is used only when withdrawn for personal use.
JKSSB FAA 2022 | MCQ
Q10. Discount allowed to a customer is recorded by debiting:
(A) Discount Allowed A/c
(B) Customer's A/c
(C) Discount Received A/c
(D) Sales A/c
Answer: (A)
Discount Allowed is an expense (Nominal Account) → Debit all expenses → Debit Discount Allowed A/c.
JKSSB FAA 2023 | MCQ
Q11. Goods taken by the proprietor for personal use will be credited to:
(A) Sales A/c
(B) Capital A/c
(C) Purchases A/c
(D) Drawings A/c
Answer: (C)
Dr. Drawings A/c (reduces capital), Cr. Purchases A/c (goods go out, reversing the original purchase).
JKSSB FAA 2022 | MCQ
Q12. Which account normally has a Credit balance?
(A) Cash A/c
(B) Purchases A/c
(C) Capital A/c
(D) Machinery A/c
Answer: (C)
Capital A/c (Representative Personal) — the owner is the giver → normally has a Credit balance. Cash, Purchases, Machinery normally carry Debit balances.
JKSSB FAA 2022 | MCQ
Q13. The full form of "L.F." in the journal is:
(A) Ledger File
(B) Ledger Folio
(C) Liability Fund
(D) Liquid Fund
Answer: (B)
L.F. = Ledger Folio — the page number of the ledger where the account has been posted.
JKSSB FAA 2023 | MCQ
Q14. A compound journal entry involves:
(A) Only one debit and one credit
(B) Only one account
(C) More than two accounts
(D) Only cash transactions
Answer: (C)
A compound journal entry involves more than two accounts — multiple debits, multiple credits, or both.
JKSSB FAA 2023 | Short Answer
Q15. Record the following transactions in the Journal of Mr. Ajay:
(i) Started business with cash ₹80,000   (ii) Purchased goods on credit from Suresh ₹15,000   (iii) Sold goods for cash ₹20,000
DateParticularsL.F.Dr. (₹)Cr. (₹)
(i)Cash A/c   Dr.80,000
To Capital A/c80,000
(Being cash brought in as capital by Mr. Ajay)
(ii)Purchases A/c   Dr.15,000
To Suresh's A/c15,000
(Being goods purchased on credit from Suresh)
(iii)Cash A/c   Dr.20,000
To Sales A/c20,000
(Being goods sold for cash)
🧠
Memory Tricks & Exam Tips
🔑 TRICK 1 — Remember the 3 Golden Rules (PRN)
Personal → Receiver / Giver  |  Real → Comes In / Goes Out  |  Nominal → Expense & Loss / Income & Gain
🔑 TRICK 2 — DEAL / CLIP for Normal Balances
DEAL = accounts with DEBIT normal balance: Drawings, Expenses, Assets, Losses
CLIP = accounts with CREDIT normal balance: Capital, Liabilities, Income, Profits
🔑 TRICK 3 — Office Use vs Personal Use (Frequently Tested!)
Cash withdrawn from bank for office use → Dr. Cash A/c  |  Cr. Bank A/c
Cash withdrawn from bank for personal use → Dr. Drawings A/c  |  Cr. Bank A/c

⚡ Rapid-Fire Exam Checklist

  • The Accounting Equation always balances — if it doesn't, an error exists.
  • Journal is the Book of Original / Prime Entry — not the Ledger.
  • Narration begins with "Being …" and is written in brackets.
  • The debit account is written first; credit account is indented with "To".
  • Total Debits must always equal Total Credits in every entry.
  • Goodwill is an intangible Real Account — not Nominal.
  • Capital A/c is a Representative Personal Account — not Nominal.
  • L.F. column is filled after posting, not during journalising.
  • Purchases Return A/c = Returns Outward A/c.
  • Sales Return A/c = Returns Inward A/c.
🚫 Common Mistakes to Avoid
  • Crediting Cash A/c when bank is used (and vice versa).
  • Confusing Sales A/c with Cash A/c in cash sales.
  • Forgetting to write narration — marks are deducted.
  • Calling Goodwill a Nominal Account — it is a Real Account.
  • Writing "To Cash A/c Dr." — the "Dr." appears only on the Debit line.

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