Recording Accounts Payable - Financial Accounting
11K views
Mar 2, 2023
Professor AJ Kooti explains how to record Accounts Payable in Accounting as part of his financial accounting course series. https://thebusinessprofessor.com/en_US/accounting-taxation-and-reporting-managerial-amp-financial-accounting-amp-reporting/accounts-payable-definition
View Video Transcript
0:00
All right, so now that we're talking about current liabilities, I think the most obvious
0:03
one is accounts payable. I think we're pretty used to that, pretty familiar with that
0:07
But let's just go back and make sure we understand how to record basic current liabilities
0:12
The first one will be purchases on credit. So if we purchase something on credit, then it would be something like supplies, if that's
0:21
what we're purchasing, and then we would credit AP for that amount
0:26
Not too much of a difference there. And then once we pay that off, it's going to be cash, or should be AP, for that amount of whatever we paid off
0:33
And then cash is what we're going to credit for paying it off. Our cash goes down
0:38
We've known that since, what, chapter two we've been doing this. So that's not much, there's not much difficulty in that
0:46
Another one that we talked about back in chapter two was unearned revenues
0:50
How would we record that? Remember, unearned revenues is when somebody gives us cash up front
0:55
We still owe them the product or service So the way we do that would be we would debit cash for that amount that they gave us the prepaid what they prepaid us and then we would credit unearned revenue and then as we started to give them the product or the service probably the service over time
1:10
we will start taking it out of unearned revenue for whatever it was and then also credit whatever
1:15
our earned revenue account is whether it be service revenue or whatnot so again these are just
1:21
refreshers we've been doing these from the very beginning it shouldn't be too bad the next one is
1:25
something a little different. The next one is dealing with something that we're
1:29
probably all familiar with to a certain degree depending on where you are and
1:33
that is sales tax. So really what I'm talking to right now is there I mean
1:38
they're most I think most all states have sales tax at least to the degree of
1:43
something. Some states don't have sales tax on certain items whereas other states
1:47
have sales tax on everything but we have to keep up with them from a business
1:51
perspective. So these are the amounts the sellers has collected as sales tax from
1:56
customers when sales occur So you as the customer are paying the sales tax the business that you give the sales tax to is simply just holding it for the appropriate taxing authority So they just
2:08
going to hold it but they still owe it. So let's look at an example of that real quick. So Romeo Company sold inventory to a customer for $500 cash in a state with a 7% sales tax
2:19
The inventory originally cost Romeo Company $300 and at the end of the quarter Romeo remits the tax
2:24
due to the state taxing authority journalized these entries. So let's look at that real quick
2:28
First thing is we sold this inventory to our customers for $500. Now it says that they paid
2:34
cash for it. So we know our cash is going up. They paid cash for it. So we also know that our sales
2:42
tax is $35 because $500 times 7%. So our cash is going to go up and it's going to go up by the $500
2:49
that we sold plus the $35 in sales tax because that's what they're giving us
2:55
So Also know that my service revenue or sales revenue I guess it be sales revenue in this situation because we dealing with inventory it going to be because that what I earned from my inventory And then that we also going to have cost of goods sold for We also going to have
3:12
inventory for $300. That finishes out how we know of selling inventory. But we're off by $35
3:18
We're off by $35 on the credit side. And so what we'll call that is going to be a sales tax payable
3:24
We still owe that to the state taxing authority. So that's why it's a payable. It's not our money. I do want you to pay attention to this. It's not an expense. We're not going to have sales tax expense because that would imply that this was ours and we used it up. This was never our money. We're just putting it into payables because we're going to have to give it or we owe it to the right authority. But it was never ours to begin with. We're just holding
3:45
Now it's time to remit it to the state taxing authority. It means we're going to send it to them, pay them
3:50
So we're going to debit sales tax payable to get rid of it off of our books for $35
3:55
and then decrease our cash through credit of $35. That's how you do a sales tax payable example
4:02
Thank you
#Accounting & Auditing
#Billing & Invoicing
#Bookkeeping
#Entertainment Industry
#Recording Industry
#Tax Preparation & Planning