1. Balance Sheet — Meaning
A Balance Sheet is a statement (not an account) showing the financial position of the business as on a specific date. It lists all Assets owned by the business and all Liabilities (including Owner's Capital) owed by the business.
The two sides of the Balance Sheet must always be equal.
The Balance Sheet is NOT an account — it does NOT have Dr./Cr. entries. It is a position statement prepared on a specific date.
2. Format of Balance Sheet
Horizontal / Traditional Format (T-format)
| Liabilities (Capital Side) | Assets Side |
|---|---|
| Capital (+ Net Profit – Drawings) | Fixed Assets (Land, Building, Machinery) |
| Long-term Liabilities (Loans) | Investments |
| Current Liabilities (Creditors, Bills Payable, Outstanding Expenses) | Current Assets (Stock, Debtors, Prepaid, Cash/Bank) |
Vertical Format
Commonly used in modern company accounts:
- Shareholders' Funds (Capital + Reserves)
- Non-Current Liabilities
- Current Liabilities
- Total Equity and Liabilities = Non-Current Assets + Current Assets
3. Marshalling of Assets and Liabilities
Marshalling refers to the arrangement/order in which assets and liabilities are presented in the Balance Sheet.
| Basis | Order of Liquidity | Order of Permanence |
|---|---|---|
| Assets arranged from | Most liquid → Least liquid (Cash first → Fixed Assets last) |
Most permanent → Least permanent (Fixed Assets first → Cash last) |
| Liabilities arranged from | Most payable first → Capital last | Capital first → Current Liabilities last |
| Common in | Banking/Financial institutions | Sole proprietorships, partnerships |
4. Classification of Assets
| Type | Description | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed Assets (Non-Current) | Long-term, not for resale, used in business | Land, Building, Machinery, Furniture, Vehicles, Goodwill, Patents |
| Investments | Long-term financial investments | Shares, Debentures, Fixed Deposits (>1 year) |
| Current Assets | Converted to cash within 1 year / normal operating cycle | Stock, Debtors, Bills Receivable, Prepaid, Cash, Bank, Accrued Income |
| Fictitious Assets | Losses/deferred expenses shown as assets to be written off over time | Preliminary Expenses, Discount on issue of shares, P&L Dr. balance (net loss) |
5. Classification of Liabilities
| Type | Description | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Capital | Owner's equity (Opening Capital ± adjustments) | Capital + Net Profit – Net Loss – Drawings + Interest on Capital – Interest on Drawings |
| Long-term Liabilities | Payable after more than 1 year | Long-term Loans, Debentures, Bank Term Loans |
| Current Liabilities | Payable within 1 year / operating cycle | Creditors, Bills Payable, Outstanding Expenses, Bank Overdraft, Income received in advance |
| Contingent Liabilities | Possible future liabilities — uncertain (shown in notes, not in BS) | Pending lawsuit, Guarantees given |
6. Key Points on Adjustments in Balance Sheet
- Outstanding Expenses: Add to expense (P&L Dr.) + Show as Current Liability in BS.
- Prepaid Expenses: Deduct from expense (P&L Dr.) + Show as Current Asset in BS.
- Accrued Income: Add to income (P&L Cr.) + Show as Current Asset in BS.
- Deferred Income: Deduct from income (P&L Cr.) + Show as Current Liability in BS.
- Depreciation: Add to P&L Dr. + Deduct from asset in BS.
- Bad Debts & Provision: Add Bad Debts to P&L Dr.; create Provision (deducted from Debtors in BS).
- Drawings: Deducted from Capital in Balance Sheet.
- Goods taken by proprietor for personal use (Drawings in kind): Dr. Drawings A/c, Cr. Purchases A/c — deducted from capital and from purchases.