No
credit to shareholder and debit to the company
It is a debit from the company side it is always a debit and when you pay out cash it is a credit
debit
Debit account
A debit is taken straight from the money you have in your bank account. A credit is taken, then the cost billed to you. With a debit, you pay now with no interest. With a credit, you pay later with possible interest added to it.
It's on the Debit side. A current asset. A = Assets --------DEBIT L = Liabilities -----------------------------CREDIT O = Owner's equity --------------------------CREDIT R = Revenue ---------------------------CREDIT E = expenses --------DEBIT All expenditures in different heads of accounts are debit and all income are credit. for an example, you deposite a certain amount to your correspondence bank. To your company's account register bank account of that certain amount will be debit & your company's account will be credit of that said amount. Credit decreases the normal balance of Office Supplies account.
Debit
Parent company journal entry Debit cash | Credit accounts payable - rent Holding company journal entry Debit accounts receivable - rent | Credit cash
debit loan accountcredit owners equityDebit Loan Payable Debit Interest Expense Credit Paid in Capital
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)
You can if you have a credit or debit card. You can't get over 50,000 points, just an FYI.
A debit card takes money directly from your account. A credit card takes the money from the credit card company, and the credit card company will bill you in monthly installments until you pay them back (plus interest). A debit card is like paying in cash, without actually having the cash on you. A credit card is similar to taking a small loan.