Entry of bill recievable is:
Bill Recievable A/c dr.
To debtor
debit accounts receivable
credit sales
Debit utility expenses 900Credit expenses payable 900Debit expenses payable 900Credit cash / bank 900
what is bill receivable and bill payeble definition with example
debit telephone expensescredit expenses payable
phone bill is liability for business as it is payable in future and not an asset as the benefit of it has already taken by business.
bill receivable is what is owed to a company; bill payable is what is paid
Debit utility expenses 900Credit expenses payable 900Debit expenses payable 900Credit cash / bank 900
In QuickBooks, you go to 'Accountant'--> 'make general journal entries'. And in 'Account' you write the account of the bill and the amount will be in the debit side. Then down the second account is 'account payable' with the amount in the credit side.
what is bill receivable and bill payeble definition with example
debit telephone expensescredit expenses payable
debit purchasescredit accounts payable
phone bill is liability for business as it is payable in future and not an asset as the benefit of it has already taken by business.
No, if you "PAID" $600 on a phone bill that is not an account payable, it's an expense. Accounts Payable is something you "OWE" but have not paid yet.Most companies pay their "bills" such as phone, electrical, etc, as they get them and they are not recorded onto the books until they are paid, however, if the company so chooses and they wish to record the bill prior to payment, then an Account Payable would be used. For example. My company received a phone bill for $600 on October 1st, however we are not going to pay the bill until October 15th and I still want to record this on my books, the following entries would be made.Phone Expense (debit) $600Accounts Payable-Phone (credit) $600Once the 15th arrives and I pay the bill, the following adjustments would have to be made.Accounts Payable - Phone (debit) $600Cash (credit) $600If you paid "ahead" then it is listed as a "Prepaid Expense", a good example of this would be Rent paid 6 months in advance.The Journal Transaction for this would reflect:Prepaid Rent (debit) $$$$$Cash (credit) $$$$$As each month progressed, you would "adjust" the entries by doing the following:Rent Expense (debit) $$$$$Prepaid Rent (credit) $$$$$
bill receivable is what is owed to a company; bill payable is what is paid
To record the telephone bill, the journal entry would be: Debit Telephone Expense (income statement account) for the amount of the bill, and Credit Accounts Payable (balance sheet liability account) for the same amount if the bill is to be paid later, or Credit Cash (balance sheet asset account) if the bill is paid immediately.
no
When bill received:[Debit] Advertisement expense[Credit] Expenses payableWhen partial payment[Debit] Expenses payable[credit] Cash / bank
ALL payable accounts are liabilities no matter what they are for. Whether it is a bill payable, mortgage payable, note payable, wages payable, etc, they are all listed as a liability. This is because a "payable" is something you (your company) owes but has not paid yet. For a bill such as Phone, once the obligation is met it is no longer a liability but an expense.