First of all, all accounts needs to be defined in company charts of accounts. So if any account is not already exists, first create it in charts of accounts for any transaction.
the accounts payable account is on the general ledger and is generally comprised of many smaller vendor accounts which are listed and tracked separately in the "accounts payable subsidiary ledger". So each vendor would be a subsidiary account of the accounts payable ledger.
Open Account - account listed as "open" on your credit report are accounts that are open, includes all accounts that have been reported within the last 90 days.
Accounts receivables are the money that is owed to a business, accounts payables are the invoices or bills that a company has incurred and must pay to their vendors or suppliers. A/R Accounts...the accounts payable account is on the general ledger and is generally comprised of many smaller vendor accounts which are listed and tracked separately in the "accounts payable subsidiary ledger"....
Debit (decrease) accounts payable and then credit (decrease) cash. Accounts receivables are the money that is owed to a business, accounts parables are the invoices or bills that a company has incurred and must pay to their vendors or suppliers. A/R Accounts.the accounts payable account is on the general ledger and is generally comprised of many smaller vendor accounts which are listed and tracked separately in the "accounts payable subsidiary ledger."
land
Typically, the accounts that are credited are placed first in a journal entry, followed by the accounts that are debited. The credit account is listed on the first line with the credit amount, and the debit account is listed below with the debit amount.
the accounts payable account is on the general ledger and is generally comprised of many smaller vendor accounts which are listed and tracked separately in the "accounts payable subsidiary ledger". So each vendor would be a subsidiary account of the accounts payable ledger.
This could be one of two Journals, for the most part, a General Journal is where the entry goes, however, many companies choose to use subsidiary journals in order to keep accounts more organized and may set up a Subsidiary Expense Journal, in which case the telephone expense would be listed in that subsidiary journal along with all other expenses and the General Journal would only show a total for all expense accounts while the subsidiary journal would break each expense account down into more detail.So either the General Journal or a Subsidiary Expense Journal (depending on the company)
Open Account - account listed as "open" on your credit report are accounts that are open, includes all accounts that have been reported within the last 90 days.
Accounts receivables are the money that is owed to a business, accounts payables are the invoices or bills that a company has incurred and must pay to their vendors or suppliers. A/R Accounts...the accounts payable account is on the general ledger and is generally comprised of many smaller vendor accounts which are listed and tracked separately in the "accounts payable subsidiary ledger"....
accounts payable is account in balance sheet
An Interest bearing account is a bank account in which, the banks pays you an interest for keeping your money deposited in that account. Ex: Savings Bank Account - You usually get around 3.5% rate of...Accounts receivables are the money that is owed to a business, accounts payables are the invoices or bills that a company has incurred and must pay to their vendors or suppliers. A/R Accounts...the accounts payable account is on the general ledger and is generally comprised of many smaller vendor accounts which are listed and tracked separately in the "accounts payable subsidiary ledger
Debit (decrease) accounts payable and then credit (decrease) cash. Accounts receivables are the money that is owed to a business, accounts parables are the invoices or bills that a company has incurred and must pay to their vendors or suppliers. A/R Accounts.the accounts payable account is on the general ledger and is generally comprised of many smaller vendor accounts which are listed and tracked separately in the "accounts payable subsidiary ledger."
A general ledger is a summary of all transactions that occur in a company (this is not entirely accurate, the general ledger shows you the balances and debits and credits to each specific account but does not provide detailed information on the transaction itself, the Journal is where the transactions are listed and then posted amounts are taken from the journal and put in the general ledger.) The General Ledger, sometimes referred to as the Nominal Ledger is the main accounting record of a business which uses double-entry accounting. It generally includes such accounts as current assets, fixed assets, liabilities, revenues, expenses, capital, etc. The general ledger is the group of accounts that support the value of accounts listed on the major financial records, such as Trial Balance, Balance Sheet, Statement of Owners Equity, Income Statement, etc. The general ledger may be supported by one or more subsidiary ledgers that provide more detailed information on accounts listed. For example, an account payable (or receivable) subsidiary ledger will contain more specific information on each individual account. For Example, say your General Ledger shows that you have a debit balance of $1500 in Accounts Receivable, this is a general amount, the subsidiary ledger will break down how much each customer actually owes. An example may be: Customer A owes you $500 Customer B owes you $400 Customer C owes you $300 Customer D owes you $300 The general ledger shows the full balance while the subsidiary ledger provides more detailed information
When using a General Ledger, accounts such as Accounts Payable or Accounts Receivable are much easier to work with in the General Ledger if they have a "single" sum of all accounts, in other words for example you have 100 customers that owe you "X" amount of money total. The sum of all the accounts can be listed in the General Ledger, while each specific account detail, i.e customer information, amount owed, etc, can be kept separate in a Subsidiary Ledger.
land
Yes, unless the account has a listed Payable on Death beneficiary or the account was specifically devised in the will.