Lesson 8 of 33 · Free
Contents
- 1 Trial Balance
- 1.1 What is a trial balance?
- 1.2 How to prepare one
- 1.3 A worked example
- 1.4 What a trial balance catches
- 1.5 If the trial balance doesn’t balance
- 1.6 Three methods of preparing a trial balance
- 1.7 Practice
- 1.8 Lesson recap
- 1.9 Deepening the Concept
- 1.10 Indian Application & Regulatory Context
- 1.11 Worked Example (in Rupees)
- 1.12 Common Mistakes to Avoid
- 1.13 Practice Questions with Answers
- 1.14 Key Takeaways
- 1.15 Frequently Asked Questions
Trial Balance
The one-page proof that your books balance — and the limits of what it actually proves.
What is a trial balance?
The trial balance is a one-page summary of every ledger account’s closing balance on a given date, with debit balances in one column and credit balances in the other. Its job is simple: prove that total debits equal total credits. If they don’t, there’s an arithmetical error in your books and you need to find it before producing financial statements.
How to prepare one
- Close off every ledger account. Compute the balance c/d.
- List each account. Asset and expense balances go in the debit column. Liability, income, and capital balances go in the credit column.
- Total both columns. They must match.
- If they don’t, find the error — usually a posting mistake, an arithmetic slip, or a one-sided entry.
A worked example
After posting all of May’s transactions for our café from Lesson 4, the closing balances are:
| Account | Type | Balance (₹) | Column |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cash | Asset | 52,500 | Debit |
| Accounts Receivable | Asset | 18,000 | Debit |
| Inventory | Asset | 26,000 | Debit |
| Equipment | Asset | 40,000 | Debit |
| Accounts Payable | Liability | 14,500 | Credit |
| Capital | Equity | 1,00,000 | Credit |
| Sales | Income | 22,000 | Credit |
| Totals | 1,36,500 / 1,36,500 | ✓ | |
What a trial balance catches
- Posting errors — a number transposed (₹54,000 typed as ₹45,000).
- One-sided entries — debited an account but never credited the other side.
- Addition errors in a ledger account.
- Wrong column — an asset balance accidentally written in the credit column.
- Errors of omission — a transaction never recorded at all.
- Errors of commission — recorded against the wrong customer or vendor (right total, wrong account).
- Errors of principle — capitalising what should be expensed (or vice versa). Buying office furniture and putting it in “Repairs Expense” still balances.
- Compensating errors — two mistakes that happen to cancel out.
If the trial balance doesn’t balance
The difference between debit and credit totals is your error. Some shortcuts:
- Divide the difference by 2. If you find an account balance equal to that quotient on the wrong side, you’ve probably listed it in the wrong column. Example: difference of ₹14,000 → look for a ₹7,000 account on the wrong side.
- Divide the difference by 9. If it divides evenly, you may have transposed digits (₹540 typed as ₹450).
- Look for round numbers. A ₹1,000 difference often means a ₹1,000 entry was posted on only one side.
- Recompute every ledger balance. Tedious but reliable.
Three methods of preparing a trial balance
- Totals method — list total debits and total credits for each account separately. Less common.
- Balances method — list only the net closing balance of each account. Most common, used in the example above.
- Totals-and-balances method — four columns (Dr. total, Cr. total, Dr. balance, Cr. balance). Used for detailed audits.
Practice
A trial balance shows: Debit total ₹4,38,000; Credit total ₹4,35,000. Salaries Payable of ₹1,500 is shown on the debit side. Is that the only problem?
Hint: Salaries Payable is a liability → it should be on the credit side. Moving it shifts ₹1,500 from debit to credit, a swing of ₹3,000. The trial balance now balances at ₹4,36,500 each side. ✓
Lesson recap
- Trial balance proves total debits = total credits.
- It catches arithmetic and posting errors but not omissions or misclassifications.
- Common debugging tricks: divide difference by 2 or by 9.
- Always prepare a trial balance before financial statements.
Cement what you just learned
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Apply what you’ve learned
Deepening the Concept
A trial balance is the periodic sanity check of every accountant’s day — a single sheet that lists every ledger account and its closing balance, with debit balances in one column and credit balances in the other, ending in two totals that must be equal. If the two totals match, you have at least mechanical proof that the double-entry rule has been respected; if they do not, an error exists and must be hunted down before any financial statement can be drawn. A balanced trial balance is necessary but not sufficient: it does not guarantee that the entries themselves are correct, only that for every Dr there has been a matching Cr. The trial balance is therefore the bridge between the ledgers and the financial statements; the income-statement line items are extracted from it and the balance-sheet items follow. Indian audit firms use the trial balance as the workbook anchor for all substantive procedures — sample-selection, ratio checks, ECL computations and disclosure preparation.
Indian Application & Regulatory Context
Under Section 128 of the Companies Act 2013, the books of account must be kept in a state that allows a true and fair view to be drawn at any time. The trial balance is the proximate document that demonstrates this. ICAI’s SA 500 (Audit Evidence) and SA 700 (Forming an Opinion) treat the trial balance as the population from which audit samples are drawn. For GSTR-9 annual return preparation, the trial balance is the source of supply, ITC, RCM and tax-paid figures, which are then reconciled to the returns. Tally Prime can generate a multi-period trial balance at the click of a button, which makes month-on-month variance analysis straightforward.
Worked Example (in Rupees)
Scenario: After posting all May 2026 transactions, Bharat Traders extracts a trial balance showing Cash ₹50,000 (Dr), Bank ₹2,40,000 (Dr), Debtors ₹3,00,000 (Dr), Stock ₹1,80,000 (Dr), Capital ₹4,00,000 (Cr), Creditors ₹2,20,000 (Cr), Sales ₹5,00,000 (Cr), Purchases ₹3,80,000 (Dr), Wages ₹40,000 (Dr), Rent ₹30,000 (Dr).
- Sum Dr column: 50,000 + 2,40,000 + 3,00,000 + 1,80,000 + 3,80,000 + 40,000 + 30,000 = ₹12,20,000.
- Sum Cr column: 4,00,000 + 2,20,000 + 5,00,000 = ₹11,20,000.
- Difference: ₹1,00,000 — totals do not match; there is an error.
- Investigate: missing GST liability ledgers and possibly an opening balance.
- After locating Output GST ₹90,000 (Cr) and Capital opening balance correction ₹10,000 (Cr), the trial balance balances at ₹12,20,000 on both sides.
Takeaway: The trial balance forced the accountant to discover and correct a real omission before the month-end MIS went out — exactly the discipline it is designed to impose.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Believing a balanced trial balance proves zero errors: compensating errors and missing transactions can both hide undetected.
- Ignoring suspense account entries: using a Suspense ledger to force a balance is a temporary fix that must be cleared before period close.
- Forgetting opening balances: a fresh trial balance without correct opening figures throws every closing balance off.
- Not reconciling control accounts: the Sundry Debtors and Sundry Creditors balances in the TB must equal the sum of the respective sub-ledgers.
- Skipping the period-on-period variance review: month-on-month TB comparison catches anomalies that a single TB cannot.
Practice Questions with Answers
Q1. Why does a trial balance match even when entries are wrong?
Answer: Because double-entry only requires Dr = Cr for each entry. If both legs are posted to wrong accounts (e.g., rent recorded as repairs), the TB still balances even though the financial statements will be wrong.
Q2. Explain how a ₹1,000 error in one entry can produce a ₹1,000 mismatch in the trial balance.
Answer: If the entry is posted only on one side (Dr or Cr) for ₹1,000, or if the amount on one side is mis-keyed by ₹1,000, the TB will show exactly ₹1,000 mismatch.
Q3. What is a Suspense account and how is it cleared?
Answer: Suspense is a temporary holding account used when a TB does not balance. The accountant investigates the difference, identifies the omitted or wrong posting, and passes a correcting journal entry to clear the suspense — never leaving it open at year-end.
Q4. How does the trial balance support GSTR-9 annual return preparation?
Answer: The trial balance feeds supply, ITC, RCM and tax-paid figures into GSTR-9 reconciliation; GSTR-9C then certifies that the books-vs-returns variance is reconciled.
Key Takeaways
- A trial balance lists all ledger balances in two columns — Dr and Cr — that must equal.
- It is a necessary but not sufficient check of book accuracy.
- It is the source data for income statement and balance sheet preparation.
- Suspense balances must be cleared before the period is closed.
- Auditors and tax authorities treat the TB as the population from which samples are drawn.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should a trial balance be extracted daily?
For small businesses, monthly is acceptable; for high-volume firms (e-commerce, fintech), daily extraction catches errors early.
What is an adjusted trial balance?
It is the trial balance after period-end adjustments (depreciation, accruals, prepayments) have been posted. The financial statements are prepared from this version, not the unadjusted TB.
Can Tally produce a trial balance for a specific date in the past?
Yes. Tally allows you to extract the TB as of any date in the active period, which is useful for audit-trail verification.
Does Ind AS change how the trial balance is prepared?
Not the mechanics, but it adds line items for OCI movements, ROU assets, lease liabilities and ECL allowances — all of which must appear in the TB before the Ind AS financial statements are drawn.