1) What is Accounting?
Simple Meaning
Accounting means:
Recording + Classifying + Summarizing + Checking money transactions of a business.
In simple words:
Where money came from + Where money went + What balance is left = Accounting
Every business needs this.
Examples:
- Shop owner buys goods → must record
- Customer pays cash → must record
- Salary paid → must record
- Rent paid → must record
- Profit earned → must calculate
This complete money tracking is called Accounting.
Real-life Example
Imagine a petty shop.
Morning cash = ₹5,000
Transactions:
Bought biscuits = ₹1,000
Sold items = ₹2,500
Paid electricity = ₹500
Now owner wants to know:
- How much cash left?
- Profit or loss?
- How much stock remains?
- Any amount to receive?
- Any amount to pay?
Accounting gives answers.
Concept
Think:
Business language = Accounting language
Just like we speak English or Tamil, businesses speak through accounts.
2) Types of Accounts
Accounting divides everything into 3 main account types:
- Personal Account
- Real Account
- Nominal Account
Students must first identify:
Transaction belongs to which type?
Then entry becomes easy.
3) Personal Account
Meaning
Personal Account means:
Account related to a person / company / bank / customer / supplier.
Anyone or any organization treated as a “person” in accounting.
Examples:
- Ram Account
- Kumar Account
- SBI Bank Account
- Amazon Account
- Supplier Account
- Customer Account
All are Personal Accounts.
Example
You buy goods from Ravi on credit ₹10,000.
Here Ravi is a person.
So:
Ravi Account = Personal Account
Types of Personal Account
Natural Person
Human beings:
- Ram
- Kumar
- Priya
Artificial Person
Organizations:
- Bank
- Company
- School
- Hospital
Representative Person
Represents people:
- Salary Outstanding
- Rent Outstanding
- Prepaid Insurance
4) Real Account
Meaning
Real Account means:
Accounts related to things/assets that exist.
Something you can see / touch / own.
Examples:
- Cash
- Furniture
- Building
- Computer
- Machinery
- Stock
- Land
These are assets.
These come under Real Account.
Example
Bought computer ₹30,000.
Computer is an asset.
So:
Computer Account = Real Account
5) Nominal Account
Meaning
Nominal means:
Income / Expense / Loss / Gain
These are temporary accounts.
Examples Expense:
- Salary
- Rent
- Electricity
- Advertisement
- Repair
Examples Income:
- Commission received
- Discount received
- Interest received
Examples Loss:
- Theft loss
Examples Gain:
- Profit on sale
All are Nominal Accounts.
Example
Paid salary ₹20,000.
Salary = expense.
So:
Salary Account = Nominal Account
6) Golden Rules of Accounting
Each account type has one rule.
Students should memorize conceptually.
Personal Account Rule
Debit the Receiver
Credit the Giver
Example:
Paid cash to Ravi ₹5,000.
Ravi receives money.
Ravi = Receiver → Debit
Cash goes → Credit
Entry:
Ravi A/c Dr ₹5,000
To Cash A/c ₹5,000
Real Account Rule
Debit What Comes In
Credit What Goes Out
Example:
Bought furniture cash ₹10,000.
Furniture comes in → Debit
Cash goes out → Credit
Entry:
Furniture A/c Dr ₹10,000
To Cash A/c ₹10,000
Nominal Account Rule
Debit Expenses & Losses
Credit Income & Gains
Example:
Paid rent ₹5,000.
Rent = expense → Debit
Cash goes → Credit
Entry:
Rent A/c Dr ₹5,000
To Cash A/c ₹5,000
7) Debit & Credit Concept
Students often fear this. Teach simply.
Debit = Left side
Credit = Right side
Think:
| Debit | Credit |
|---|---|
| Receive | Give |
| Asset increases | Asset decreases |
| Expense increases | Income increases |
Example:
Cash received ₹10,000
Cash increases.
Cash = Debit.
8) Assets / Liabilities / Income / Expense
Assets
What business owns.
Examples:
- Cash
- Stock
- Computer
- Furniture
- Building
Liabilities
What business owes.
Examples:
- Loan
- Creditors
- Outstanding salary
Income
Money earned.
Examples:
- Sales
- Commission
- Interest income
Expense
Money spent.
Examples:
- Salary
- Rent
- Electricity
Easy Formula
Assets=Liabilities+CapitalAssets = Liabilities + CapitalAssets=Liabilities+Capital
Example:
Cash = ₹50,000
Loan = ₹20,000
Owner Capital = ₹30,000
Balanced.
9) Journal Entry Basics
Journal = first record book.
Every transaction first enters Journal.
Format:
Date | Particulars | Debit | Credit
Example:
Paid rent ₹5,000
Journal:
Rent A/c Dr ₹5,000
To Cash A/c ₹5,000
(Being rent paid)
10) Ledger Concept
Ledger = classified account book.
Journal is rough recording.
Ledger is grouped recording.
Example:
Cash Account:
Opening = 10,000
Rent paid = 5,000
Sales received = 8,000
Closing = 13,000
This account-wise summary is Ledger.
11) Trial Balance Concept
Trial Balance checks:
Total Debit = Total Credit
If equal:
Accounts are mathematically balanced.
Example:
Cash Dr = 20,000
Furniture Dr = 10,000
Capital Cr = 30,000
Debit = 30,000
Credit = 30,000
Balanced.
Module 2: Introduction to Tally Prime
2.1 What is TallyPrime?
Concept:
TallyPrime is an accounting and business management software that automates everything your students learned in Module 1. Instead of writing journals manually, they press a few keys. Instead of calculating trial balance, Tally shows it instantly.
Think of TallyPrime as a digital CA office that:
Records every transaction (Journal → computerized)
Maintains all ledgers automatically
Generates financial reports instantly
Handles GST calculations and filing
Why this matters for students:
“In the real world, no one writes journals on paper. Companies use Tally. If you know accounting principles + Tally, you are job-ready.”
2.2 Features of TallyPrime
Concept: Features are the “superpowers” of Tally that make accounting faster and error-free.
Key Features with Examples:
| Feature | What it does | Real-life Example |
|---|---|---|
| GST Compliance | Automatically calculates CGST, SGST, IGST | You sell goods at 18% GST → Tally adds 9% CGST + 9% SGST automatically |
| Inventory Management | Tracks stock in real time | Sell 5 laptops → Stock reduces by 5 instantly |
| Bank Integration | Connects directly with SBI, Axis Bank | View live bank balance inside Tally |
| TallyDrive (Cloud Backup) | Automatic backup to cloud | Never lose data even if computer crashes; 1GB free for Silver, 3GB for Gold license |
| Invoice Management System (IMS) | Tracks if suppliers filed GST | Shows mismatches before you file returns |
| Security Control | Restrict who can see what | Cashier can enter vouchers but cannot delete or see Profit |
Student Takeaway: “Tally doesn’t just record transactions—it handles tax, tracks stock, and protects data.”
2.3 Installation
Concept: Installation is putting TallyPrime software on your computer so you can open and use it.
Step-by-Step:
Pre-requisites (check before starting):
Windows 8, 10, or 11
Minimum 4GB RAM (8GB recommended)
Internet connection for activation
Installation Steps:
Step 1: Download → Go to tallysolutions.com → Click "Download" → Save setup file in Downloads folder Step 2: Install → Double-click setup.exe file → Choose "Install New" → Follow on-screen prompts → Click "Install" Step 3: Launch → Click "Start TallyPrime" after installation completes Step 4: Activate License → Click "Activate New License" → Enter Serial Number and Activation Key (provided with purchase) → Enter Unlock Key received on email → Press Enter
Student Practice: Install TallyPrime on their computers (or use lab computers where pre-installed).
2.4 Company Creation
Concept: A “Company” in Tally is like a separate digital file cabinet for one business’s books. If you run three businesses, you create three companies.
Important Dates to Understand:
| Field | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Financial Year begins from | Official accounting year | 1-Apr-2025 (Indian financial year starts April 1) |
| Books beginning from | When YOU start entering data | If starting new business → same as financial year. If migrating mid-year → enter current date |
Step-by-Step Company Creation:
Step 1: Open TallyPrime → Double-click Tally icon on desktop Step 2: Go to Company Create Screen → Press Alt+K (Company) → Select "Create" Step 3: Enter Basic Details ┌────────────────────────────────────────────┐ │ Field │ What to Enter │ ├────────────────────────────────────────────┤ │ Name │ Ramesh Electronics │ │ Mailing Name │ Ramesh Electronics │ │ Address │ 123, Gandhi Road, Mumbai│ │ Country │ India │ │ State │ Maharashtra │ │ Pin Code │ 400001 │ │ Mobile No │ 9876543210 │ │ Email │ ramesh@electronics.com │ └────────────────────────────────────────────┘ Step 4: Set Financial Year → Financial Year begins from: 1-Apr-2025 → Books Beginning from: 1-Apr-2025 Step 5: Base Currency (auto-filled as Indian Rupee ₹) Step 6: Press Ctrl+A to Save
Practical Project Example: Create a company named “Sharma Traders” with address “45, Market Street, Delhi” starting 1-Apr-2025.
2.5 Select Company / Shut Company
Concept:
Select Company = Open a company to work on it
Shut Company = Close the current company (but data remains safe)
Step-by-Step:
To Select a Company:
Gateway of Tally → Select Company (or press Alt+K → Select) → Choose "Ramesh Electronics" from list → Press Enter → Now you see Gateway of Tally with company name on top
To Shut a Company:
Gateway of Tally → Shut Company (or press Alt+K → Shut) → Confirm "Yes" → You return to Company list screen
Student Practice: Select the company you created, then shut it, then select it again.
2.6 Alter Company
Concept: “Alter” means modify or change company details after creation. For example: phone number changed, address shifted, or financial year correction.
What you can change:
Name, address, contact details
Financial year dates (only if no transactions entered)
Base currency
Security settings
Step-by-Step:
Step 1: Gateway of Tally → Alt+K (Company) → Alter Step 2: Select "Ramesh Electronics" from list Step 3: Change any field (e.g., Mobile number to 9988776655) Step 4: Press Ctrl+A to save
Important Note: Once you start entering transactions, you CANNOT change:
Financial year beginning date
Books beginning date
Student Practice: Alter your company to change email address to “contact@sharmatraders.com”.
2.7 Backup & Restore
Concept:
Backup = Make a copy of your data (like saving a file to USB drive or cloud)
Restore = Bring back data from a backup (if original gets deleted/corrupted)
Think of it like:
“Backup is your insurance policy. You never need it until disaster strikes. Then it’s priceless.”
Two ways to backup:
| Method | How it works | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Manual Backup | You press keys, choose location | One-time backup before major changes |
| TallyDrive (Cloud) | Automatic daily backup | Continuous protection from data loss |
Step-by-Step Manual Backup:
Step 1: Gateway of Tally → Alt+Y (Data) → Backup Step 2: Select "Ramesh Electronics" (or current company) Step 3: Destination Path: Select folder (e.g., D:\Backup or USB drive) Step 4: Press Enter to confirm Step 5: Tally shows "Backup completed successfully"
Step-by-Step Restore:
Step 1: Gateway of Tally → Alt+Y (Data) → Backup & Restore → Restore Step 2: Select source (Local Drive or TallyDrive) Step 3: Navigate to backup file location Step 4: Select company to restore Step 5: Press Ctrl+A to start restore
Student Practice:
Take a manual backup of your company to a USB drive or D: drive
Verify backup file exists
(Optional) Try restoring to a different name (e.g., “Sharma Traders – Restored”)
2.8 Security Control / Password
Concept: Security Control lets you decide WHO can do WHAT in the company. Not everyone should have full access.
Three Levels of Security:
| Security Type | What it protects | Who needs it |
|---|---|---|
| TallyVault Password | Entire company data (encrypted) | Owner, Administrator |
| User Access Control | Specific functions (vouchers, reports) | All users |
| Password Policy | Strength rules for passwords | IT Administrator |
Step-by-Step to Enable Security Control:
Step 1: While CREATING company (or Alter company later) Step 2: Set "Use Security Control?" → Yes Step 3: Enter Administrator Name: "Admin" Step 4: Enter Administrator Password: (type twice) Step 5: Confirm Now Tally asks for password every time company is opened.
Creating Different User Roles:
Gateway of Tally → Alt+K (Company) → Security Control → Users → Create Example Users: ┌─────────────────────────────────────────────┐ │ User Name │ Password │ Access Rights │ ├─────────────────────────────────────────────┤ │ Admin │ admin123 │ Full access │ │ DataEntry │ entry123 │ Only voucher entry │ │ Viewer │ view123 │ Only reports (no entry)│ │ Billing │ bill123 │ Only sales invoice │ └─────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Student Practice:
Enable security control on your company
Create a user “DataEntry” with password “pass123”
Log in as DataEntry and verify you cannot alter company settings
⚠️ WARNING: Forgetting TallyVault password makes company data permanently inaccessible . Write passwords in a safe place!
2.9 Company Split (Advanced)
Concept: As data grows over years, Tally becomes slow. Company Split divides data by financial year into separate companies, keeping old data accessible but not slowing down current work.
When to split: After closing a financial year (e.g., on 1-Apr-2026, split off 2025-26 data)
Step-by-Step:
⚠️ STEP 0 (MOST IMPORTANT): Take FULL BACKUP before splitting!
Step 1: Gateway of Tally → Alt+Y (Data) → Split Company Data
Step 2: Select company to split (e.g., "Ramesh Electronics")
Step 3: Enter Split Date: 31-Mar-2026
(Data before this date goes to OLD company)
(Data from this date onward goes to NEW company)
Step 4: Confirm → Tally creates two companies:
- "Ramesh Electronics - Old" (upto 31-Mar-2026)
- "Ramesh Electronics" (from 1-Apr-2026 onwards)
Step 5: Verify both companies open and show correct balancesStudent Practice (Demonstration Only):
Teacher demonstrates split using a sample company
Students should NOT split their main practice company yet
Explain concept, let them practice on a dummy company
Practical Project: Create a Sample Company
This is the culminating task for Module 2.
Project Instructions:
Part 1: Company Creation
Create a company with the following details:
┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────┐ │ Field │ Value │ ├──────────────────────────────────────────────────┤ │ Name │ Sunrise Stationery │ │ Mailing Name │ Sunrise Stationery │ │ Address │ Shop No. 12, Plaza Market, Pune │ │ Country │ India │ │ State │ Maharashtra │ │ Pin Code │ 411001 │ │ Mobile No │ 9822012345 │ │ Email │ contact@sunrise.in │ │ Financial Year begins │ 1-Apr-2025 │ │ Books beginning from │ 1-Apr-2025 │ │ Base Currency │ Indian Rupee (₹) │ └──────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Part 2: Security Setup
Enable Security Control
Set Administrator name: “Owner”
Create two additional users:
User “Clerk” (only voucher entry access)
User “Viewer” (only report viewing)
Part 3: Backup
Take a manual backup to D:\TallyBackup\
Name the backup file “Sunrise_Stationery_Backup_01”
Part 4: Verification
Shut the company
Select it again (confirm you can open)
Log in as “Clerk” and verify restricted access
Part 5: Documentation
Students write a 1-page report containing:
Steps they followed
Screenshots (or written notes) of each stage
Any errors faced and how they resolved them
Quick Reference Cheat Sheet for Students
| Task | Shortcut / Path |
|---|---|
| Create Company | Alt+K → Create |
| Select Company | Alt+K → Select |
| Shut Company | Alt+K → Shut |
| Alter Company | Alt+K → Alter |
| Backup | Alt+Y → Backup |
| Restore | Alt+Y → Backup & Restore → Restore |
| Security Control | Alt+K → Security Control |
| Split Company | Alt+Y → Split Company Data |
| Save any screen | Ctrl+A |
| Exit without save | Ctrl+Q |
Common Student Errors & Solutions
| Error | Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| “Company not found” | Wrong directory selected | Check data path in Gateway → Company Info |
| Cannot alter financial year | Transactions already entered | Cannot change; must create new company |
| Forgot TallyVault password | No recovery option | ⚠️ Data is permanently lost. Always write down passwords! |
| Backup failed | Destination drive full or write-protected | Free up space or change destination |
| Restore overwrite warning | Company name already exists | Choose “Replace” or “Rename” |
Module 3: Masters Creation
Groups & Ledgers: Complete Explanation
Part 1: What Are Groups? (The Big Picture)
Conceptual Foundation:
Think of a library:
Groups = Bookshelves (labeled: “Fiction”, “Non-Fiction”, “History”, “Science”)
Ledgers = Individual books on those shelves
Without shelves (groups), all books would be piled randomly. You would never find anything.
In accounting terms:
Group = A category that collects similar accounts
Ledger = A specific account within that category
Why groups matter:
| Without Groups | With Groups |
|---|---|
| Balance Sheet shows 100 random accounts | Balance Sheet shows organized Assets, Liabilities |
| Profit & Loss mixes sales, rent, purchase, salary | P&L shows Income and Expenses separately |
| Trial Balance is unusable | Trial Balance is grouped logically |
| Finding “Rent” among 500 ledgers is hard | “Rent” is under “Indirect Expenses” folder |
Part 2: The 28 Pre-defined Groups in Tally (Memorize These)
Tally comes with 28 fixed groups. You cannot delete or rename them. You can only create sub-groups under them.
Groups are organized into four categories:
Category A: Balance Sheet Groups (Assets)
| Group Name | What it contains | Example Ledgers |
|---|---|---|
| Current Assets | Assets that convert to cash within 1 year | Stock, Debtors, Bank, Cash |
| Bank Accounts | All bank accounts (Sub-group of Current Assets) | SBI, HDFC, ICICI |
| Cash-in-Hand | Physical cash (Sub-group of Current Assets) | Petty Cash, Main Cash |
| Sundry Debtors | Customers who owe you | Rajesh, Meera, Sohan |
| Loans & Advances (Assets) | Loans you give to others | Loan to Employee |
| Stock-in-Hand | Inventory value (automatic by Tally) | (Tally manages this) |
| Fixed Assets | Long-term assets (used over 1 year) | Building, Machinery, Computer, Furniture |
| Depreciation | Accumulated depreciation (contra asset) | Depreciation on Computer |
Category B: Balance Sheet Groups (Liabilities & Equity)
| Group Name | What it contains | Example Ledgers |
|---|---|---|
| Current Liabilities | Debts due within 1 year | Creditors, GST Payable, Outstanding Expenses |
| Sundry Creditors | Suppliers you owe | HP World, Bajaj Electronics |
| Duties & Taxes | Tax liabilities (GST, TDS) | CGST Payable, SGST Payable |
| Provisions | Estimated expenses | Provision for Bad Debts |
| Secured Loans | Loans with collateral | Bank Loan, Vehicle Loan |
| Unsecured Loans | Loans without collateral | Loan from Friend, Director Loan |
| Capital Account | Owner’s investment | Owner’s Capital, Partner A Capital |
| Reserves & Surplus | Retained profits | General Reserve, P&L Account |
Category C: Profit & Loss Groups (Expenses)
| Group Name | What it contains | Example Ledgers |
|---|---|---|
| Direct Expenses | Expenses directly tied to production/purchase | Purchase, Freight, Customs Duty |
| Indirect Expenses | Operating expenses (not tied to production) | Rent, Salary, Electricity, Advertising |
| Manufacturing Expenses | Factory/production costs | Power Fuel, Factory Rent |
| Administrative Expenses | Office management costs | Office Rent, Stationery, Postage |
| Selling & Distribution Expenses | Sales-related costs | Advertising, Courier, Commission |
| Financial Expenses | Interest and finance costs | Bank Charges, Interest on Loan |
| Depreciation | Asset value reduction | Depreciation on Machinery |
Category D: Profit & Loss Groups (Incomes)
| Group Name | What it contains | Example Ledgers |
|---|---|---|
| Direct Incomes | Income from main business activity | Sales, Service Income |
| Indirect Incomes | Other incomes (not main business) | Discount Received, Interest Received, Rent Received |
| Sales Accounts | Sales revenue (Sub-group of Direct Incomes) | Local Sales, Export Sales |
| Purchase Accounts | Purchase cost (Sub-group of Direct Expenses) | Local Purchase, Import Purchase |
Part 3: Golden Rule of Groups (The Hierarchy)
Rule: Every ledger MUST belong to a group. And every group (except Primary) MUST belong to a parent group.
The Ultimate Parent: “Primary” (at the top of all groups)
Visual Hierarchy:
Primary (Top level)
├── Current Assets
│ ├── Bank Accounts
│ │ ├── SBI Current (Ledger)
│ │ └── HDFC Current (Ledger)
│ ├── Cash-in-Hand
│ │ └── Petty Cash (Ledger)
│ └── Sundry Debtors
│ ├── Rajesh (Ledger)
│ └── Meera (Ledger)
├── Indirect Expenses
│ ├── Rent (Ledger)
│ ├── Salary (Ledger)
│ └── Electricity (Ledger)
└── Direct Incomes
└── Sales (Ledger)Key understanding: When you create a ledger, Tally automatically places it in the right financial statement based on its group:
| If group is under… | Ledger appears in… |
|---|---|
| Current Assets, Fixed Assets, Bank, Cash, Debtors | Balance Sheet (Asset side) |
| Current Liabilities, Capital, Loans, Creditors | Balance Sheet (Liability side) |
| Direct Expenses, Indirect Expenses | Profit & Loss (Expense side) |
| Direct Incomes, Indirect Incomes | Profit & Loss (Income side) |
Part 4: Creating Groups (Step-by-Step)
When should you create a NEW group?
| Situation | Action |
|---|---|
| Existing group perfectly fits | Use existing group (e.g., Rent → Indirect Expenses) |
| Need detailed sub-category | Create sub-group (e.g., “Festival Bonus” under “Indirect Expenses”) |
| New type of expense/income not covered | Create new group under appropriate parent |
Step-by-Step Example 1: Create “Festival Bonus” Group
Scenario: You want to track Diwali bonuses separately from regular salary.
Step 1: Gateway of Tally → Create → Group
(Shortcut: Alt+G → Create → Group)
Step 2: Enter details
┌────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ Field │ Value │
├────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Name │ Festival Bonus │
│ Under │ Indirect Expenses │
│ (Select from list) │ (Press space to select)│
├────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ Nature of Group (optional) │
│ (Appears only for certain parents) │
│ - For Banks: Bank, Cash, etc. (not needed here)│
└────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Step 3: Press Ctrl+A to saveStep-by-Step Example 2: Create “North India Sales” (Sub-group under Direct Incomes)
Scenario: You want to track sales region-wise. Step 1: Gateway → Create → Group Step 2: ┌────────────────────────────────────────────────┐ │ Name │ North India Sales │ │ Under │ Direct Incomes │ └────────────────────────────────────────────────┘ Step 3: Ctrl+A
Step-by-Step Example 3: Create “Office Equipment” (Sub-group under Fixed Assets)
Scenario: You want to group computers, printers, furniture separately from building. Step 1: Gateway → Create → Group Step 2: ┌────────────────────────────────────────────────┐ │ Name │ Office Equipment │ │ Under │ Fixed Assets │ └────────────────────────────────────────────────┘ Step 3: Ctrl+A
What happens after creation:
New group appears in Group List
Future ledgers can be created under this new group
Reports (Balance Sheet, P&L) show this group as a separate line item
Part 5: What Are Ledgers? (The Smallest Unit)
Conceptual Foundation:
If groups are bookshelves, ledgers are individual books on those shelves.
Definition: A ledger is an account that records all transactions of one specific type (e.g., “Rent”, “SBI Bank”, “Customer Rajesh”).
Every transaction in Tally touches at least two ledgers (one Debit, one Credit).
Example transaction: Paid rent ₹10,000
Ledger 1: Rent (Debit)
Ledger 2: Cash (Credit)
Types of Ledgers:
| Type | Example | Group | Has Opening Balance? | Appears in |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash/Bank | Cash, SBI Bank | Cash-in-Hand, Bank Accounts | Yes (Dr.) | Balance Sheet |
| Debtor (Customer) | Rajesh, Meera | Sundry Debtors | Yes (Dr. if owed) | Balance Sheet |
| Creditor (Supplier) | HP World, Bajaj | Sundry Creditors | Yes (Cr. if owe) | Balance Sheet |
| Expense | Rent, Salary | Indirect Expenses | No (starts zero) | Profit & Loss (Dr.) |
| Income | Sales, Discount Received | Direct/Indirect Incomes | No (starts zero) | Profit & Loss (Cr.) |
| Asset | Building, Computer | Fixed Assets | Yes (Dr.) | Balance Sheet |
| Liability | Bank Loan | Secured Loans | Yes (Cr.) | Balance Sheet |
| Capital | Owner’s Capital | Capital Account | Yes (Cr.) | Balance Sheet |
Pre-defined Groups Quick Reference:
| If you are creating… | Use this group |
|---|---|
| Expense (Rent, Salary, Electricity) | Indirect Expenses |
| Expense (Purchase, Freight, Customs) | Direct Expenses |
| Income (Sales, Service Fees) | Direct Incomes |
| Income (Discount Received, Interest) | Indirect Incomes |
| Customer who owes you | Sundry Debtors |
| Supplier you owe | Sundry Creditors |
| Bank account | Bank Accounts |
| Physical cash | Cash-in-Hand |
| Long-term asset (Computer, Furniture) | Fixed Assets |
| Owner’s investment | Capital Account |
| Loan from bank | Secured Loans |