Journal Entry Construction
Guidance on structuring, documenting, reviewing, and posting journal entries across all major accounting cycles.
Core Entry Patterns by Accounting Cycle
Vendor & Expense Accruals
Record obligations for goods received or services consumed when no invoice has arrived by the reporting cut-off.
Entry template:
- DR: Appropriate expense (or asset if capitalizable)
- CR: Accrued liabilities
Estimation sources:
- Purchase orders showing confirmed delivery
- Service agreements with work performed but unbilled
- Standing vendor arrangements (utilities, professional fees, SaaS)
- Staff reimbursement claims awaiting processing
Operational guidance:
- Configure for automatic reversal at the start of the subsequent period
- Apply the same estimation technique from period to period for comparability
- Record the basis of each estimate (contract value, PO total, trailing average)
- Compare prior-period estimates to eventual actuals and refine methodology
Tangible & Intangible Asset Charges
Systematically allocate the cost of long-lived assets over their service lives.
Entry template:
- DR: Depreciation or amortization expense (allocated to cost center)
- CR: Contra-asset (accumulated depreciation or amortization)
Allocation approaches:
- Even-line: (Acquisition cost minus residual) divided by expected life — the default for most financial reporting
- Accelerated: Apply a declining percentage to the remaining book value each period
- Activity-based: Charge proportional to actual output versus total expected output
Operational guidance:
- Source the entry from the fixed-asset or intangible-asset subledger
- Confirm newly capitalized items carry the correct useful life and method
- Check for retired or impaired assets requiring a write-off entry
- Maintain parallel tracking for book versus tax depreciation where they diverge
Prepaid Cost Amortization
Release advance payments to expense as the underlying benefit is consumed.
Entry template:
- DR: Relevant expense category (insurance, licenses, rent, maintenance)
- CR: Prepaid asset
Frequently encountered prepaids:
- Annual insurance policies
- Multi-period software or platform subscriptions
- Advance rent payments
- Service and maintenance agreements
- Deposits for conferences or events
Operational guidance:
- Maintain an amortization register showing coverage dates and monthly charge amounts
- Expense immaterial prepayments immediately rather than building a schedule
- Accelerate remaining amortization when a contract is cancelled or terminated early
- Add new prepaid items to the register promptly upon payment
Compensation Accruals
Capture all people costs attributable to the reporting period.
Entry templates:
Wages for partial pay-period overlap:
- DR: Wage expense (by department)
- CR: Accrued compensation
Incentive compensation:
- DR: Bonus expense (by department)
- CR: Accrued bonuses
Employer benefit obligations:
- DR: Benefits expense
- CR: Accrued benefits
Employer payroll taxes:
- DR: Payroll tax expense
- CR: Accrued payroll taxes
Operational guidance:
- Pro-rate salary accruals based on business days falling inside the period versus the total pay cycle
- Incentive accruals should mirror plan design: target payout, performance multipliers, and expected distribution timing
- Include employer-borne costs — social security, unemployment insurance, health plans, retirement matching
- Accrue for earned but unused paid time off where required by law or company policy
Contract Revenue Recognition
Record revenue consistent with the transfer of promised goods or services to the customer.
Entry templates:
Release of advance billings:
- DR: Contract liability (deferred revenue)
- CR: Revenue
Recognize with simultaneous receivable:
- DR: Trade receivables
- CR: Revenue
Collect or bill before delivery:
- DR: Cash or trade receivables
- CR: Contract liability (deferred revenue)
Operational guidance:
- Apply the ASC 606 five-step model: (1) identify the contract, (2) identify performance obligations, (3) determine the transaction price, (4) allocate price across obligations, (5) recognize upon satisfaction
- Maintain contract-level schedules that map obligations to delivery milestones
- Handle variable consideration (discounts, rebates, penalties) using the expected-value or most-likely-amount method
- Retain documentation sufficient to support external audit review
Documentation Standards
Each posted entry must include:
- Narrative memo: A plain-language explanation of what economic event the entry captures and the reason it is required
- Quantitative support: The formula, schedule, or data extract that produces the recorded amounts
- Source references: Identifiers linking to underlying evidence — PO numbers, invoice references, contract IDs, payroll registers
- Applicable period: The fiscal period to which the entry relates
- Preparer identity: Name and timestamp of the individual who built the entry
- Authorization evidence: Sign-off from the appropriate approver per the delegation matrix
- Reversal flag: Indication of whether the entry will auto-reverse, and the reversal date
Authorization Framework
Delegation Matrix
| Entry Classification | Dollar Range | Required Approver | |---|---|---| | Recurring / template-based | All amounts | Accounting manager | | Ad hoc or non-standard | Under $50K | Accounting manager | | Ad hoc or non-standard | $50K -- $250K | Controller | | Ad hoc or non-standard | Over $250K | CFO or VP of Finance | | Consolidation / top-side | All amounts | Controller or higher | | Prior-period corrections | All amounts | Controller or higher |
Calibrate dollar bands to the organization's own materiality and governance requirements.
Approval Verification Steps
The approver should confirm each of the following before signing off:
- Debits and credits are equal (the entry balances)
- The target period is open and correct
- General ledger account codes are valid and fit the transaction's nature
- Dollar amounts tie to the supporting calculation without error
- The memo is clear enough that a third party could understand the purpose
- Cost center, department, and project tags are accurate
- The accounting treatment matches established policy and prior-period practice
- Accrual entries are flagged for reversal
- All referenced support documents are attached or linked
- The entry falls within the preparer's authorized scope
- No duplicate of a previously posted entry exists
- Any unusually large or round-dollar figures carry explicit justification
Frequent Mistakes and Prevention
- Imbalanced entries: Total debits do not equal total credits — system controls should block this, but verify on manual uploads
- Incorrect period: Entry lands in a closed or wrong fiscal month
- Inverted signs: Debit and credit legs are swapped
- Duplicate posting: The same economic event is captured twice — search for duplicates before submitting
- Misrouted account: Amounts post to a similarly numbered but incorrect GL code
- Unreversed accruals: A prior-period accrual remains on the books, overstating the current balance
- Outdated recurring estimates: Template entries roll forward without reflecting changed business conditions
- Suspiciously round figures: Amounts ending in multiple zeros that may not derive from actual calculations
- Wrong exchange rate: Foreign-currency entries converted at an outdated or incorrect FX rate
- Orphaned intercompany legs: One side of an intercompany transaction posted without the offsetting entity's entry
- Capitalization misjudgment: Expenses incorrectly capitalized, or capital items expensed in error
- Cut-off violations: Transactions recorded based on invoice date rather than the date goods transferred or services were rendered