you owe them :(
It means you have money. But if you're in DEBT, you owe money.
It means you owe money, you passed your limit.
It is short for the Latin 'debere' - 'to owe'. Debit and debt come from that word.
A credit balance shows up on a vendor statement when you have returned defective goods, for example. You can call the vendor and request a check for that amount or apply it to any outstanding balance that you owe that vendor. Do you mean "debit memo" instead of debit balance? A debit memo is sent to a vendor to let it know that you are making a deduction from what you owe to cover defective goods, a short shipment, a price reduction, or some other matter. When the vendor receives the debit memo and agrees with your reduction, it will send you a credit memo. And then, you may have a credit balance on your account- depending on whether or not you owe them any money.
Accounts Receivable is classified as an Asset. Assets have a normal Debit balance. If you mean to say that the customer has paid off some of the amount in their account, then the amount is listed on the Credit side and in the Debit side of the Cash account. If they have bought supplies on the account (owe you money) then the amount is put into the Debit side.
Yes. Credit means that you have overpaid and they owe you money.
It means you have money. But if you're in DEBT, you owe money.
On a bill a debit is a charge, while a payment is a credit.
It means you owe money, you passed your limit.
"I owe you some debit" is incorrect phrasing. It seems like a mix-up of two different concepts. "I owe you" means you need to pay back money you borrowed, while "debit" refers to a transaction that takes money out of an account. The correct phrase may be "I owe you a debt."
Nothing
It is short for the Latin 'debere' - 'to owe'. Debit and debt come from that word.
It means they have charged you for some amount. So you may have less $ in the bank or owe more $ than before the debit occurred.
If your credit (not debit) card has a negative balance on your statement, then there is an overpayment (you paid more than you owe). So now they owe you money. This is usually applied towards future charges.
A credit balance shows up on a vendor statement when you have returned defective goods, for example. You can call the vendor and request a check for that amount or apply it to any outstanding balance that you owe that vendor. Do you mean "debit memo" instead of debit balance? A debit memo is sent to a vendor to let it know that you are making a deduction from what you owe to cover defective goods, a short shipment, a price reduction, or some other matter. When the vendor receives the debit memo and agrees with your reduction, it will send you a credit memo. And then, you may have a credit balance on your account- depending on whether or not you owe them any money.
how to find out what you owe on a utility bill from about 10 years ago.
Accounts Receivable is classified as an Asset. Assets have a normal Debit balance. If you mean to say that the customer has paid off some of the amount in their account, then the amount is listed on the Credit side and in the Debit side of the Cash account. If they have bought supplies on the account (owe you money) then the amount is put into the Debit side.