Let’s start with the basics. Accounting is often called the language of business, and in the restaurant world, it’s a language you need to speak fluently.
At its core, accounting is about recording, classifying, and summarizing financial transactions. In your restaurant, this means keeping track of every dollar that comes in and goes out. It might sound simple, but it’s crucial for making informed decisions about your business.
One fundamental principle is the double-entry bookkeeping system. This means that every transaction affects at least two accounts. For example, when a customer pays for a meal, your cash account increases, and your revenue account increases by the same amount. This system helps ensure accuracy and provides a clear picture of your restaurant’s financial health.
Another key principle is the matching concept. This means recognizing expenses in the same period as the revenue they help generate. In practice, this might mean recording the cost of ingredients when you sell a dish, not when you bought the ingredients. This gives you a more accurate picture of your profitability.
Financial Statements
Financial statements are the report cards of your business. They tell you how well you’re doing financially. The three main financial statements are the income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement.
- Income Statement (Profit & Loss): This shows your revenue and expenses over a specific period. It tells you if you’re making a profit or loss. In a restaurant, you’ll want to pay close attention to your food and labor costs as percentages of your total revenue.
- Balance Sheet: This is a snapshot of what your business owns (assets) and owes (liabilities) at a specific point in time. The difference between these is your equity – essentially, the value of your business. For a restaurant, significant assets might include kitchen equipment and inventory.
- Cash Flow Statement: This tracks the actual cash moving in and out of your business. It’s crucial because even a profitable restaurant can run into trouble if it doesn’t have enough cash to pay its bills. This statement helps you understand your liquidity – your ability to cover short-term obligations.
Understanding these statements is crucial. They’re not just for your accountant or the tax authorities. They provide vital information that can help you make better decisions about menu pricing, staffing, purchasing, and more.
Journal entries and accounting cycles
The accounting cycle consists of several steps that occur in a specific order to record, classify, and summarize financial transactions. In restaurants, this process is crucial for maintaining accurate financial records and generating meaningful financial statements.
Journalizing:
Journalizing is the first step in the accounting cycle. It involves recording transactions in a journal, which serves as a book of original entry. The general journal is the most basic, but restaurants often use specialized journals for efficiency:
- Cash Receipts Journal: Records all transactions involving cash receipts. It typically includes columns for cash, accounts receivable, sales, and other accounts.
- Sales Journal: Records all credit sales. It usually has columns for accounts receivable and sales.
- Cash Disbursements Journal: Records all cash payments except payroll. It includes columns for cash, accounts payable, and various expense categories.
- Purchases Journal: Records purchases on account. It typically has columns for accounts payable, food inventory, and other frequently charged accounts.
- Payroll Journal: Records payroll-related transactions, including wages, salaries, and various payroll deductions.
Posting:
Posting is the process of transferring financial transactions from the journal to the general ledger. While journalizing records transactions as they occur, posting organizes these transactions into individual accounts so that businesses can easily track and analyze their financial activities. This step is essential for preparing accurate financial statements and maintaining an organized record of all transactions.
1. What is the Purpose of Posting?
Posting helps categorize and organize financial data, allowing businesses to see the total effect of transactions on each specific account, such as cash, sales, or expenses. By posting to the general ledger, a restaurant can track how much money is in its accounts, how much it owes, and how much it has earned.
2. The General Ledger
The general ledger is a master record that contains all the accounts used by the business, with each account having its own page or section. Each transaction affects one or more accounts and is posted to show these effects. The ledger helps keep a running balance of each account over time.
3. How Posting Works: Step-by-Step
- Step 1: Find the Journal Entry: Start with the completed journal entries that were recorded during the journalizing process. These entries show which accounts were affected, how much they were affected by, and whether they were debits or credits.
- Step 2: Identify the Accounts: Determine which accounts in the general ledger are affected by each journal entry. For example, if a restaurant purchased ingredients for cash, the accounts involved might be Food Inventory (debit) and Cash (credit).
- Step 3: Post to the Ledger:
- Transfer the debit amount from the journal to the debit side of the appropriate ledger account.
- Transfer the credit amount from the journal to the credit side of the appropriate ledger account.
- Record the date and reference the journal entry to create a link between the ledger and the original transaction.
- Step 4: Update the Account Balance: Update the running balance for each account. This helps the restaurant know the current total in each account at any given time.
Example of Posting
Suppose a restaurant records a journal entry for purchasing food inventory for $1,000 in cash:
- Journal Entry:
- Debit Food Inventory: $1,000
- Credit Cash: $1,000
Posting to the Ledger:
Food Inventory (Debit) |
|
|
Date |
Details |
Amount ($) |
mm/dd/yyyy |
Purchase |
1,000 |
|
Balance |
1,000 |
Cash (Credit) |
|
|
Date |
Details |
Amount ($) |
mm/dd/yyyy |
Purchase |
1,000 |
|
Balance |
Remaining Cash |
Why is Posting Important?
- Keeps Accounts Organized: Posting helps organize transactions into specific accounts, making it easier to track totals for each type of account.
- Supports Financial Reporting: It prepares the accounts for generating reports like the income statement and balance sheet, as these documents rely on the data organized in the general ledger.
- Creates an Audit Trail: Each posted entry can be traced back to its original journal entry, providing a way to verify and audit financial transactions.
Limitations and Errors
While posting helps maintain organized records, it does not catch all types of errors. For example, if the wrong amount is journalized or the wrong account is used, the error will carry over into the ledger. Regular checks and reconciliations are needed to ensure accuracy.
Trial Balance:
A trial balance is a report that lists all the accounts in the general ledger with their respective debit or credit balances at the end of an accounting period. Its main purpose is to make sure that the total amount of debits equals the total amount of credits, ensuring the accounting records are balanced. Here’s a simplified explanation of how it works:
Why is a Trial Balance Important?
The trial balance helps accountants check for errors in the bookkeeping process. If the total debits and credits are not equal, it signals that there may be a mistake somewhere in the entries, such as an incorrect amount, a missing transaction, or an entry recorded in the wrong account.
How Does It Work?
Think of the trial balance as a summary of all your account balances in one place. Here’s a step-by-step example of how it fits into the accounting process:
- Recording Transactions: Throughout the accounting period, transactions are recorded in journals (e.g., sales, expenses, purchases) and then posted to the general ledger, where each account’s total is tracked.
- Listing Balances: At the end of the period, the trial balance lists the ending balance of each account. Accounts with a debit balance (e.g., assets, expenses) are listed on the left, while accounts with a credit balance (e.g., liabilities, revenues) are listed on the right.
- Checking Totals: The total of the debit column should equal the total of the credit column. If they match, it confirms that the accounts are balanced.
Example of a Trial Balance
Imagine a simple restaurant with the following accounts and balances at the end of the month:
Account Name |
Debit ($) |
Credit ($) |
Cash |
5,000 |
|
Food Inventory |
2,000 |
|
Equipment |
10,000 |
|
Accounts Payable |
|
3,000 |
Revenue (Sales) |
|
15,000 |
Salaries Expense |
4,000 |
|
Rent Expense |
1,500 |
|
Utilities Expense |
500 |
|
Capital (Owner’s Equity) |
|
5,000 |
Total |
23,000 |
23,000 |
What Does This Mean?
- Balanced Totals: The debit total ($23,000) matches the credit total ($23,000), indicating that the books are balanced, and no errors have been detected in the basic ledger entries.
- Confirmation: This balanced trial balance confirms that, mathematically, the entries have been recorded correctly, but it doesn’t guarantee there are no other issues (e.g., an entry recorded in the wrong account).
Limitations of a Trial Balance
A trial balance can show that the books are balanced, but it won’t catch certain errors:
- Omitted Transactions: If a transaction was never recorded, the trial balance won’t reveal this.
- Errors of Commission: If the wrong account was used for a transaction (e.g., recording utilities expense as rent), the trial balance will still balance but be inaccurate.
- Equal Errors: If a mistake was made where both the debit and credit sides are wrong by the same amount, the trial balance will still appear correct.
In summary, a trial balance is like a checkpoint in the accounting cycle that confirms whether your books are balanced, helping to detect basic bookkeeping errors before moving on to the next steps in financial reporting.
Adjusting Entries:
Adjusting entries are made at the end of the accounting period to update certain accounts before financial statements are prepared. Common adjustments in restaurants include:
- Inventory/Cost of Goods Sold: Adjusting for changes in inventory levels.
- Prepaid Expenses: Recognizing expenses that have been paid in advance.
- Depreciation: Recording the portion of fixed asset cost used during the period.
- Accruals: Recording expenses incurred but not yet paid, or revenues earned but not yet received.
Financial Statement Preparation:
After adjustments, financial statements are prepared, including the income statement and balance sheet.
Closing Entries:
Temporary accounts (revenues, expenses, and dividends) are closed to the Income Summary account, which is then closed to Retained Earnings. This process resets these accounts for the next period.
Post-Closing Trial Balance:
A final trial balance is prepared to ensure all temporary accounts have been closed and the debits and credits are still in balance.