✔ Copyrights: This account tracks the costs incurred to establish copyrights, the legal rights given to an author, playwright, publisher, or any other distributor of a publication or production for a unique work of literature, music, drama, or art. This legal right expires after a set number of years, so its value is amortized as the copyright gets used up.
✔ Goodwill: This account is only needed if a company buys another company for more than the actual value of its tangible assets. Goodwill reflects the intangible value of this purchase for things like company reputation, store locations, customer base, and other items that increase the value of the business bought.
If you hold a lot of assets that aren’t of great value, you can also set up an “Other Assets” account to track them. Any asset you track in the Other Assets account that you later want to track individually can be shifted to its own account. Book IV Chapter 6 discusses adjusting the Chart of Accounts.
After you cover assets, the next stop on the bookkeeping highway is the accounts that track what your business owes to others. These “others” can include vendors from which you buy products or supplies, financial institutions from which you borrow money, and anyone else who lends money to your business. Like assets, liabilities are lumped into two types: current liabilities and long-term liabilities.
Current liabilities
Current liabilities are debts due in the next 12 months. Some of the most common types of current liabilities accounts that appear on the Chart of Accounts are
✔ Accounts Payable: Tracks money the company owes to vendors, contractors, suppliers, and consultants that must be paid in less than a year. Most of these liabilities must be paid 30 to 90 days from billing.
✔ Sales Tax Collected: You may not think of sales tax as a liability, but because the business collects the tax from the customer and doesn’t pay it immediately to the government entity, the taxes collected become a liability tracked in this account. A business usually collects sales tax throughout the month and then pays it to the local, state, or federal government on a monthly basis. Book V Chapter 4 discusses paying sales taxes in greater detail.
✔ Accrued Payroll Taxes: This account tracks payroll taxes collected from employees to pay state, local, or federal income taxes as well as Social Security and Medicare taxes. Companies don’t have to pay these taxes to the government entities immediately, so depending on the size of the payroll, companies may pay payroll taxes on a monthly or quarterly basis. Book III Chapter 3 discusses how to handle payroll taxes.
✔ Credit Cards Payable: This account tracks all credit-card accounts to which the business is liable. Most companies use credit cards as short-term debt and pay them off completely at the end of each month, but some smaller companies carry credit-card balances over a longer period of time. Because credit cards often have a much higher interest rate than most lines of credits, most companies transfer any credit-card debt they can’t pay entirely at the end of a month to a line of credit at a bank. When it comes to your Chart of Accounts, you can set up one Credit Card Payable account, but you may want to set up a separate account for each card your company holds to improve tracking credit-card usage.
How you set up your current liabilities and how many individual accounts you establish depends on how detailed you want to track each type of liability. For example, you can set up separate current liability accounts for major vendors if you find that approach provides you with a better money management tool. For example, suppose that a small hardware retail store buys most of the tools it sells from Snap-on. To keep better control of its spending with Snap-on, the bookkeeper sets up a specific account called Accounts Payable – Snap-on, which is used only for tracking invoices and payments to that vendor. In this example, all other invoices and payments to other vendors and suppliers are tracked in the general Accounts Payable account.
Long-term liabilities
Long-term liabilities are debts due in more than 12 months. The number of long-term liability accounts you maintain on your Chart of Accounts depends on your debt structure. The two most common types are
✔ Loans Payable: This account tracks any long-term loans, such as a mortgage on your business building. Most businesses have separate loans payable accounts for each of their long-term loans. For example, you could have Loans Payable – Mortgage Bank for your building and Loans Payable – Car Bank for your vehicle loan.
✔ Notes Payable: Some businesses borrow money from other businesses using notes, a method of borrowing that doesn’t require the company to put up an asset, such as a mortgage on a building or a car loan, as collateral. This account tracks any notes due.
In addition to any separate long-term debt you may want to track in its own account, you may also want to set up an account called Other Liabilities that you can use to track types of debt that are so insignificant to the business that you don’t think they need their own accounts.
Every business is owned by somebody. Equity accounts track owners’ contributions to the business as well as their share of ownership. For a corporation, ownership is tracked by the sale of individual shares of stock because each stockholder owns a portion of the business. In smaller companies that are owned by one person or a group of people, equity is tracked using Capital and Drawing accounts. Here are the basic equity accounts that appear in the Chart of Accounts:
✔ Common Stock: This account reflects the value of outstanding shares of stock sold to investors. A company calculates this value by multiplying the number of shares issued by the value of each share of stock. Only corporations need to establish this account.
✔ Retained Earnings: This account tracks the profits or losses accumulated since a business was opened. At the end of each year, the profit or loss calculated on the income statement is used to adjust the value of this account. For example, if a company made a $100,000 profit in the past year, the Retained Earnings account would be increased by that amount; if the company lost $100,000, then that amount would be subtracted from this account.
✔ Capital: This account is only necessary for small, unincorporated businesses. The Capital account reflects the amount of initial money the business owner contributed to the company as well as owner contributions made after the initial start-up. The value of this account is based on cash contributions and other assets contributed by the business owner, such as equipment, vehicles, or buildings. If a small company has several different partners, then each partner gets his or her own Capital account to track his or her contributions.
✔ Drawing: This account is only necessary for businesses that aren’t incorporated. It tracks any money that a business owner takes out of the business. If the business has several partners, each partner gets his or her own Drawing account to track what he or she takes out of the business.
Tracking the Income Statement Accounts
The income statement is made up of two types of accounts:
✔ Revenue: These accounts track all money coming into the business, including sales, interest earned on savings, and any other methods used to generate income.
✔ Expenses: These accounts track all money that a business spends in order to keep itself afloat.
The bottom line of the income statement shows whether your business made a profit or a loss for a specified period of time. Book II Chapter 5 discusses the income statement in detail. This section examines the various accounts that make up the income statement portion of the Chart