General and Special Accounting Journals
Accounting journals are a lot like that diary you may have kept as a child — or maybe still do keep! They’re a day-to-day recording of business transactions that take place within a company’s accounting department. Accountants call journals the books of original entry because no transactions get into the accounting records without being entered into a journal first. Two basic types of journals exist: general and special.
General accounting journals
A general journal is a catchall type of journal for transactions that don’t logically belong in one of the special journals. Transactions are recorded in the general journal via journal entries —that’s a shocker!
Depending on the size of the business, either all entries are recorded in the general journal or, in the case of a company with many special journals, only adjusting, reversing, or nonroutine entries are booked in the general journal.
A general journal entry always includes the following:
Date the transaction took place
Chart of account titles and numbers
Amount of the debits and credits
Brief explanation of why the transaction is being booked
Special accounting journals
If a company has many similar transactions, it uses special accounting journals. Consider some examples of special accounting journals and some transactions they may contain:
Sales journals record all sales a business makes to customers on account, which means no money changes hands between the company and the customer at the time of the sale.
Cash receipts journals record cash sales, customer payments on account, or interest and dividend payments.
Cash disbursement journals show any payment the business makes using a form of cash. These entries include purchases transactions or payments on debt.
Purchases journals show purchases a company makes on account.
Payroll journals record all payroll transactions, including gross wages, taxes withheld, and other deductions, such as health insurance paid by the employee, leading to net pay, which is the amount shown on the employee’s check.
While an accrual-based business will have cash journals, a cash-based business won’t have a sales or purchases journal as a cash-based business only recognizes transactions when cash changes hands.

Accounting Glossary
accounting equation
The equation Assets = Liabilities + Equity, which demonstrates the two-sided nature of accounting and is useful for explaining the concept of double-entry accounting (or double-entry bookkeeping).

Accounting Glossary
accounting period
The time period for which financial information is being tracked in a business, such as monthly, quarterly, or annually.

Accounting Glossary
accounts receivable
An account that records the amounts that customers owe to a business.

Accounting Glossary
adjusting entry
A correction made to a bookkeeping account that adjusts for accounting errors or other necessary changes at the end of the accounting period.

Accounting Glossary
cash flows
Used to describe the source or sources of cash or how cash is used.

Accounting Glossary
Chart of Accounts
A list of all the accounts used by a business, including what types of transactions go into each account.

Accounting Glossary
debit
An accounting entry that increases an asset or expense account, and decreases a liability or income account.

Accounting Glossary
dividends
A portion of a company’s profits paid by share of common stock on a quarterly or annual basis.

Accounting Glossary
FASB
Financial Accounting Standards Board. FASB is the highest-ranking authority in the private (non-government) sector of the U.S. for making pronouncements on GAAP and for keeping accounting standards up-to-date.

Accounting Glossary
Federal Unemployment Tax
In the U.S., the fund that used to be known simply as Unemployment. Employers contribute to the fund, and states also collect taxes to fill their unemployment fund reserves. (The acronym FUTA means Federal Unemployment Tax Act.)

Accounting Glossary
fidelity bonds
A type of insurance — typically carried by employers for their employees — that helps guard against theft and reduce the risk of loss.

Accounting Glossary
FIFO
First-in, first-out. A method for costs of goods sold in which a business charges out product costs to cost of goods sold expense in the chronological order in which the goods were acquired.

Accounting Glossary
fungible
Describes a product that is interchangeable and virtually indistinguishable from another product.

Accounting Glossary
General Ledger
A summary of all of a business’s accounts and transactions.

Accounting Glossary
IASB
International Accounting Standards Board. The IASB (based in London) is the main authoritative accounting standards setter outside the U.S.

Accounting Glossary
Journals
The location in which bookkeepers keep records (in chronological order) of daily company transactions.

Accounting Glossary
LIFO
Last-in, first-out. A method for costs of goods sold that selects the last item you purchased first, and then works backward until you have the total cost for the total number of units sold during the period.

Accounting Glossary
LLP
Limited liability partnership. A legal structure that state laws offer to qualified professionals in which all the partners have limited liability.

Accounting Glossary
PC
Professional corporation. A legal structure that state laws offer to qualified professionals who otherwise would have to operate as an unlimited partnership liability.

Accounting Glossary
petty cash
A cash account that businesses keep on hand for unexpected expenses.

Accounting Glossary
revenue
Monies that are collected in the process of selling a company’s goods and services.

Accounting Glossary
salvage value
The amount that an asset is worth after it has been fully depreciated.

Accounting Glossary
statement of cash flows
A financial statement that summarizes a business’s cash inflows and outflows during an accounting period.

Accounting Glossary
transactions
Economic exchanges between a business or other entity and the parties with which the entity interacts and makes deals.

Accounting Glossary
worker’s compensation insurance
A type of insurance carried by employers that covers its employees in case they are injured on the job.