Home Financial Terms & Definitions What Is Accrual Accounting? Definition, Examples & Journal Entries for Canadian...

What Is Accrual Accounting? Definition, Examples & Journal Entries for Canadian Businesses

0
Accrual Accounting Method
Accrual Accounting Method

Introduction

In accounting, an account is a record of the changes in an asset, liability, equity, revenue, expense, or dividend over a period of time. Accounts are the building blocks of the financial reporting system, providing the details that make up the balance sheet and income statement.

For Canadian businesses, understanding account types and how they are classified is essential for bookkeeping, software setup, and corporate tax filing with the CRA.


What Is Accrual Accounting?

Accrual accounting is a method of recording income and expenses when they are earned or incurred, not when cash is received or paid.
This system provides a more accurate picture of a company’s financial health because it matches revenue with the expenses related to generating it.

Most Canadian corporations use accrual accounting because it complies with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) and is required for T2 corporate returns.


Accrual Accounting Definition for Canadian Businesses

Under accrual accounting:

  • Revenue is recorded when services are delivered or goods are sold
  • Expenses are recorded when they are incurred
  • Cash timing does not matter

This method contrasts with the cash basis, which only records transactions when money changes hands.


Examples of How Accrual Accounting Works

Below are common accrual accounting scenarios with full debits and credits to show how financial statements are affected.


1. Revenue Earned Before Cash Is Received

Scenario:
A landscaping company completes a $3,000 job and invoices the customer. Payment will arrive in 20 days.

Journal Entry — Revenue Accrued

AccountDebitCredit
Accounts Receivable$3,000
Service Revenue$3,000

What’s happening?

  • A/R increases because the customer owes money
  • Revenue increases because the service is completed

Cash has not been received yet, but revenue is recognized now.


2. Expense Incurred Before the Bill Is Paid

Scenario:
A business receives a $600 electricity bill but will pay it next month.

Journal Entry — Expense Accrued

AccountDebitCredit
Utilities Expense$600
Accounts Payable$600

What’s happening?

  • Utilities Expense increases because cost was incurred
  • Accounts Payable increases because the money is owed

This shows expenses in the correct period.


3. When Cash Is Finally Collected or Paid

A. Customer pays the $3,000 invoice

AccountDebitCredit
Cash / Bank$3,000
Accounts Receivable$3,000

B. Business pays the $600 bill

AccountDebitCredit
Accounts Payable$600
Cash / Bank$600

These entries settle the previously recorded accruals.


Accrual Accounting and the Chart of Accounts

Accrual systems rely heavily on:

  • Accounts Receivable (asset)
  • Accounts Payable (liability)
  • Accrued Liabilities
  • Unearned Revenue
  • Prepaid Expenses

In most Canadian accounting software (QuickBooks, Sage, Xero), these accounts appear in:

  • 1000–1999: Assets
  • 2000–2999: Liabilities

Accrual accounting ensures these accounts accurately reflect current obligations and claims.


CRA Requirements and Accrual Accounting

The CRA requires corporations to use accrual accounting for:

  • T2 corporate income tax returns
  • Financial statements using GIFI codes
  • Matching income and expenses to the appropriate fiscal year

Common GIFI examples:

  • 1060 – Accounts Receivable
  • 2000 – Accounts Payable
  • 2620 – Accrued Liabilities
  • Deferred/Unearned Revenue: 2550

This ensures financial results align with the fiscal period, not cash timing.


Accrual Accounting and the Accounting Equation

Accrual accounting maintains:

Assets = Liabilities + Equity

When revenue is earned:

  • Assets increase (A/R)
  • Equity increases (revenue)

When expenses are incurred:

  • Liabilities increase (A/P)
  • Equity decreases (expense)

Accrual accounting ensures financial statements show the true financial position—not just cash on hand.


Internal Resources


Key Takeaway

Accrual accounting records revenue when earned and expenses when incurred, giving Canadian businesses more accurate financial reporting.
It is required for most corporations by the CRA and provides a clearer picture of profitability, obligations, and financial performance than cash‑basis accounting.


Resources

Exit mobile version