Adjusting Deferred and Accrued Revenue

  • Analyzing revenue accounts and creating necessary adjustments

 

Accrued Revenue

An asset/revenue adjustment may occur when a company performs a service for a customer but has not yet billed the customer. The accountant records this transaction as an asset in the form of a receivable and as revenue because the company has earned a revenue.

For instance, MacroAuto does work for a customer, Bill’s Big Trucks, in December for $5,000. When we are analyzing the trial balance accounts, we find that the customer has not been billed, so the earned revenue is not showing up in Service Revenue or in Accounts Receivable. We would make the following adjusting entry on December 31:

JournalPage 101
Date Description Post. Ref. Debit Credit
20–
Dec. 31 Accounts Receivable 5,000.00
Dec. 31       Service Revenue 5,000.00
Dec. 31 To accrue revenue earned but not yet billed.

We recorded an increase in revenue and an increase in money owed to us so that our ledgers, thus our trial balance, and therefore our financial statements, will be in compliance with GAAP, which requires accrual basis accounting.

Important Things to note

  1. This is a prototypical accrued revenue entry. If this was rent due to the company, then the account names would change to Rent Receivable and Rent Revenue. If it was interest on a note receivable, we would post the entries to Interest Receivable and Interest Revenue. It’s that simple.
  2. We have to also post this entry to the customer’s account in the subsidiary ledger so it stays in balance with the general ledger. If this was our only entry to accounts receivable ever, then the general ledger would show $5,000 in receivables, and the subsidiary ledger would show $5,000 owing from Bill’s Big Trucks. In a real company, the list of customers would be long and each would owe some different amount, obviously; but if the total in the subsidiary ledger was $435,692.89, then the total in the general ledger had better be  $435,692.89. Your accounts always need to be in balance.

If your computerized system updates revenue and receivables when a bill is issued, you might have to actually issue a back-dated bill in order to accrue this revenue (which means you would not have an adjusting journal entry because the ledger would be updated in the normal process) or you would have to post the receivable portion of the entry to a separate receivable account. You would need to post the amount separately because your system will probably not let you post directly to the subsidiary ledger or to the general ledger so that you don’t accidentally get them out of balance with each other.

Even so, theoretically, this example is a good example of an accrued revenue.

 

And there you go, entries for both accrued and deferred revenues. Remember that accrued means to “add to,” so we have earned it but haven’t recorded it yet; deferred means we have collected the cash, but we haven’t earned it yet.

Now it’s your turn to try what you have learned.