Recording Transactions

Recording transactions is the foundational function of financial accounting. Every business activity that affects the company’s financial position must be captured systematically and accurately. This process creates the raw data from which all other accounting functions—summarization, reporting, and analysis—are built.


Purpose


Process

  1. Identification – Recognize a business event with financial impact (e.g., a sale, purchase, payment, or accrual).
  2. Measurement – Assign monetary value based on reliable evidence such as invoices, contracts, or receipts.
  3. Recording – Enter the transaction in the appropriate journal using the double-entry system (debits = credits).
  4. Posting – Transfer journal entries into the general ledger and subsidiary ledgers.
  5. Trial Balance – Periodically check that total debits equal total credits to verify accuracy.

Examples


Outputs


Importance

Accurate transaction recording ensures that financial statements are reliable. Errors or omissions at this stage compromise every subsequent step of financial reporting. It also establishes a verifiable audit trail, which is critical for compliance and assurance.