Terms - BC Bookkeeping Tutorials|dwmbeancounter.com

Title
Go to content

Terms

Introduction
Cash and Banking Terms

  • Bank Statement is the record that the bank maintains that records all the deposits and deductions that increase or decrease your bank balance during a specific period of time (see Cutoff Date). The statement is mailed out by the bank to its customers at specified time intervals usually one a month.

  • Cutoff Date is the date that the bank determines and uses to prepare your bank statement as of a specified date. All your banking transactions (deposits, checks, and other adjustments) that the bank has processed that have occurred prior to and including this date are included in your current monthly bank statement. All transactions that occur after this date are included in your next month's bank statement.

  • Check Book is a record that is used to keep up with the balance in your bank account and in which you record all your deposits, payments, and deductions that either increase or decrease your bank balance.

  • Bank Draft is a document that authorizes a deduction to be made from your checking account. A common example would be a draft that is taken out of your bank account each month for insurance.

  • Check is a document used to transfer funds from one business or individual to another business or individual. The check is made payable to the payee (individual or business receiving the funds) and is signed by the payer (individual or business paying the funds). The check is "drawn on" a bank or financial institution where the payer maintains their checking account and the funds are transferred from.

  • Deposit Slip is a document used to summarize and record checks and cash received that are deposited in the bank.

  • Deposit Book is a record that contains the blank and completed deposit slips used for preparing the individual daily deposit slips. Usually the slips are treated so that a "carbon" copy is provided. The original is used for making the deposit in the bank.

  • Bank Fees are fees that a bank charges for providing various services to their customers. A common example of a bank fee is the monthly statement charge.

  • Credit Card Fees are the fees that a business encounters in order to provide the capability for their customers to use their credit cards when making a purchase. The credit card service provider charges various fees to the merchant such as a monthly statement fee, processing fee for each transaction, and usually a percentage amount for each transaction processed.

  • Direct Deposits are deposits that are sent to and directly deposited in your bank. The bank usually sends a notice to their customers to alert them that the deposit has been made on their behalf. A common example that many businesses should be familiar with is the daily transmittal (deposit) of all their customer's credit card sales processed by their credit card provider.

  • Outstanding Checks are simply checks written by a business or individual that have not yet been processed and cleared by the bank. In other words, they are checks written that have not yet gotten to the bank.

  • Deposits In Transit are deposits made by a business or individual that have not yet been credited to your account by the bank. Usually, this results from making a deposit for a day late in the afternoon or evening. When referred to when preparing a bank reconciliation, the Deposits In Transit are the deposits that have been recorded in the business's records but have not yet been recorded in the bank's records.

  • NSF is an abbreviation for Non Sufficient Funds. This occurs when a check you receive and deposit in your bank account is later returned to you because the check was "no good". In other words, your customer or whoever wrote the check did not have enough money in their bank account to cover the amount that the check was written for.

  • Bank Reconciliation is a record that is normally prepared each month after you receive your bank statement from the bank for the month. The record compares what you recorded in your cash records with what was recorded by the bank in your bank statement and provides proof as to the accuracy of your cash balance.

  • Cash Forecast (projection or budget) is simply an estimate that you prepare of the cash coming in and going out of a business during a period of time.

  • Petty Cash is a special fund that is set up to handle special payments. The special payments are small cash payments for unexpected expenditures or payments where access to a check is not readily available.

  • Cash Payments (Disbursements) Journal is a special journal (record) that is used to record all cash that is paid out by a business except for payroll. Small businesses sometimes also use this journal to record their payments for payroll.

  • Cash Receipts Journal is a special journal (record) that is used to record all receipts of cash.

  • General Journal is the record used to record unusual or infrequent types of transactions.

  • General Ledger is a book containing the accounts for all of a business's assets, liabilities, equity, revenue, and expense accounts.

  • Subsidiary Ledger Records keep up with the details of a General Ledger's account balance such as the details that make up the amounts that customers owe the business or amounts the business owes to suppliers. Two of the main subsidiary ledgers maintained by a business are the Accounts Receivable and Accounts Payable Subsidiary Ledgers.

  • Accounts Receivable Ageing- report used to age and analyze how old the amounts are that customers owe a business and what amounts are late and may need attention.

  • Accounts Payable Ageing-report used to age and analyze how old the amounts are that you owe to your suppliers and what amounts are late and may need attention.

Don't worry, many of these terms are discussed and explained in more detail in the following Lessons.



What's next ?

Recording Cash


Back to content