When Do You Record Accounting Sales?
When Do You Record Accounting Sales?
First, let's make sure we are talking about the same kind
of accounting sales. There are gross sales and net sales.
Gross sales are calculated by adding the total amount
received by the purchaser. Net sales subtract the cost to
make the product from the gross sales figure. Other
subtractions are made as well, like product returns and
discounts not settled at the time of sale. There is,
obviously, a big difference between the two.
Now that we understand two broad types of sales, the sale
of a product or service may be recorded at different times.
In cash accounting, sales are recorded when the transfer
of money and product are complete. In accrual accounting,
sales are recorded when the agreement has been made or the
order has been placed.
When using cash accounting, a record of a sale is not kept
on the ledger until cash is physically obtained. The sale
must be tracked with a different method. It still should
be written down at the time of the sale agreement. There
may be a separate book or just a compilation of receipts,
but sales must be recorded somewhere even if full payment
is not received at the time of transaction. For accounting
purposes, this is considered a contract that is a future
agreement to make a purchase. Once all the cash is
received, however, the records are easily transferred to
the income statement, cash flow statement, and/or balance
sheet.
In accrual accounting, sales orders are directly reported
to the income statement. Since the sales are counted as
revenue at the time of the purchase agreement, sales that
have been placed, but not filled are usually referred to as
outstanding orders. As stated earlier, these sales are
already marked as income, so this tag is very important to
make sure that money is actually collected. If this note
is not properly written, there isn't any notification that
payment was not received. If this occurs, not only will
the company lose money, but the books will show the debts
collected and will not be able to track where the loss is
coming from.
Regardless of cash or accrual accounting, whenever dealing
with an income statement, sales are recorded as net sales,
not gross sales. This is a general rule and should be
clarified if there is doubt as to net or gross.
Using double-entry bookkeeping makes recording sales and
payments much easier, mainly because it is a more in-depth
method of accounting. This method places debits on one
line and credits are recorded on a separate line. This is
beneficial because a purchase agreement or contract can be
listed on one line and the line directly below it can be
left blank until payment is physically received.
When the accounting sales are recorded depends on the
preferences of the controller regarding the business type,
procedures, inventory, etc. There are several bases to
make sure are covered in each method. Keeping a sloppy
ledger increases the chance of losing money and not even
knowing it.
About the Author:
Joe Coffee is a consultant for the online marketing firm,
Web Shepherd. Visit www.accountingandyou.com for
tips about leading methods of accounting and small business
accounting options.
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