Year-end adjustments for bad and doubtful debts

In my two previous posts, I discussed bad debts and doubtful debts as separate considerations for year-end adjustments. In practice though, when it comes to preparing financial statements for a company, both adjustments would be made in one combined calculation. When adjusting for ‘bad and doubtful debts’, it is important that the receivables figures are adjusted first, This means that you must deduct any bad debts written off at the year-end first. This is necessary because any general provision for doubtful debts is calculated by applying a percentage to the balance of the receivables asset account. You will only know the correct balance on this account after you have adjusted for any bad debts written off at the year-end.

Adjustment for bad debts

When you are given a preliminary trial balance:

  1. the receivables asset account will show the balance on the account before taking into account the bad debt written off at the end of the year.
  2. there may be a bad debt expense account, if the business has already written off bad debts during the course of the year and the receivables asset account (as it appears in the trial balance) will already have been reduced to take account of them.

To make the year-end adjustment for bad debts, you have to:

  1. Deduct the amount of the bad debt from the receivables asset balance in the trial balance. The remainder constitutes the up-to-date figure for receivables and will appear on the balance sheet.
  2. EITHER (if the trial balance already has a bad debts expense account) add the bad debt to the balance of the expense account OR (if the trial balance does not have a bad debts account) create a new expense account and show the bad debt as its balance.

Adjustment for doubtful debts

When you are given a preliminary trial balance:

  1. the ‘Provision for Doubtful Debts’ account in the trial balance will show the provision for doubtful debts at the end of last year/start of the current year, so the actual figure shown on the trial balance is out-of-date and should not appear at all in the current year’s financial statements.
  2. there will be no ‘Bad and Doubtful Debts’ expense account for the year shown on the trial balance. There may however be a ‘Bad Debts’ expense account, depending on whether or not bad debts have already been written off during the year.

To make the year-end adjustment for doubtful debts, you should:

  1. calculate the current year end’s provision for doubtful debts figure (the ‘new provision figure’) in accordance with the method decided by the business itself. Eventually this figure will be shown on the balance sheet.
  2. EITHER (where the new Provision for Doubtful Debts is more than the provision shown in the trial balance) add the amount by which the provision has increased to the (new or renamed) bad and doubtful debts expense account for the year OR (where the new Provision is less than the provision shown in the trial balance) subtract the amount by which the provision has decreased from the (new or renamed) bad and doubtful debts expense account for the year. The new provision figure is then shown in the ‘provision for doubtful debts’ liability account.

Year-end adjustments

Before the financial statements for an accounting period can be prepared, it is necessary to make some year-end adjustments to the trial balance. Year-end adjustments are transactions or modifications to the account entries on the trial balance. These are necessary to ensure that the accruals concept is applied to the preparation of the financial statements.

The accruals concept requires that:

  1. all income and expenditure must be ‘matched’ to the relevant accounting period; and
  2. all current obligations must be anticipated as liabilities and all asset values must be assessed to make sure they can be recovered through future profits in conditions of uncertainty.

For example, if a business’s accounting period matches the calendar year and it pays a year’s rent in advance on 1 September, only part of this payment will correspond to the current accounting period (1 Sept. – 31 Dec.). The remaining portion(1 Jan – 30 Aug.) will relate to the subsequent accounting period. According to the unadjusted trial balance, it will seem that the business has spent a lot more on rent for the current accounting period than it really has. The adjustments made effectively ‘correct’ this imbalance.

So if the rental payment made on 1 September was £12,000, only one-third of that figure (i.e. £4,000) will actually need to be shown in the financial statements for this year. The other £8,000 will be accounted for next year. This would be an example of a prepayment, as we will discuss later.

There are five year-end adjustments that you need to know, which you may need to carry out during the BLP exam:

  1. depreciation;
  2. accruals;
  3. prepayments;
  4. bad debts; and
  5. doubtful debts.

I will go into each of the five adjustments in depth over the next few posts.