Bank reconciliation
Encyclopedia
A Bank reconciliation is a process that explains the difference between the bank balance shown in an organisation's bank statement
Bank statement
An account statement or a bank statement is a summary of all financial transactions occurring over a given period of time on a deposit account, a credit card, or any other type of account offered by a financial institution....

, as supplied by the bank, and the corresponding amount shown in the organisation's own accounting records at a particular point in time.

Such differences may occur, for example, because
  • a cheque
    Cheque
    A cheque is a document/instrument See the negotiable cow—itself a fictional story—for discussions of cheques written on unusual surfaces. that orders a payment of money from a bank account...

     issued by the organisation has not been presented to the bank,
  • a banking transaction, such as a credit received, or a charge made by the bank, has not yet been recorded in the organisation's books
  • either the bank or the organisation itself has made an error


It may be easy to reconcile the difference by looking at very recent transaction
Financial transaction
A financial transaction is an event or condition under the contract between a buyer and a seller to exchange an asset for payment. It involves a change in the status of the finances of two or more businesses or individuals.-History:...

s in either the bank statement or the organisation's own accounting records (cash book) and seeing if some combination of them tallies with the difference to be explained.

If not, it may be necessary to go through and match every single transaction in both sets of records since the last reconciliation, and see what transactions remain unmatched. The necessary adjustments should then be made in the cash book, or any timing differences recorded to assist with future reconciliations.

For this reason, and to minimise the amount of work involved, it is good practice to carry out such reconciliations at reasonably frequent intervals.

Reconciliations are generally performed by specialised accounting software
Accounting software
Accounting software is application software that records and processes accounting transactions within functional modules such as accounts payable, accounts receivable, payroll, and trial balance. It functions as an accounting information system...

though the understanding of what occurs is important for a successful reconciliation.

Abbreviations

The following abbreviations are typical abbreviations on a bank statement:
  • DO - Debit Order
  • SO - Stop Order
  • IS - Insurance
  • SF - Service Fees
  • SD - Sundry Debits
  • EC - Error Corrected
  • MT - Magnetic Tape (Not generally used in modern statements)
  • IN - Interest
  • CB - Cheque Book
  • CM - Cheque marked for payment
  • RD - Return to drawer
  • DB - Debit Balance
  • od - In overdraft

Example

The following is a worked example of a bank reconcillation problem. To understand this example fully, you should have a good knowledge of general accounting principles.

Question

The following was obtained from the records of ABC Computers of 30 September 2009

Bank reconciliation statement on 31 August 2009 (Previous month)
£ £
Balance as per bank statement 12200
Outstanding deposit: 2100
Total 14300
Outstanding cheques: No: 100 2200
No: 106 740
No: 109 540 (3480)
Total 10820 (Opening balance for cash book)

Cash Book for September 2009
Date Details Amount (£) Cheque Date Details Amount (£)
3 Sales and VAT 3700 110 3 Water and Electricity
4 A Jones 2400 and VAT 400
10 Deposit 3100 111 4 S Payne 21100
15 Sales and VAT 850 112 9 J Kooste 350
30 Deposit 1670 113 10 Purchases and VAT 2700
114 12 Salaries 4200
115 Donation 500
116 20 Purchases and VAT 3150
118 J Goosen 600
Pencil Total 11720 Pencil Total 33000


Bank Statement for September 2009
Debit Credit Balance
Date £ £ £
1 Balance 12200 Cr
4 Cheque 111 21100 8900 Dr
Deposit 3700 5200 Dr
Deposit 2100 3100 Dr
5 Deposit 2400 700 Dr
SF 60 760 Dr
DO 1400 2160 Dr
10 Cheque 113 2070 4230 Dr
Cheque 110 400 4630 Dr
Deposit 3100 1530 Dr
Cheque 112 530 2060 Dr
Cheque 614 2180 4240 Dr
CB 20 4260 Dr
Cheque 109 540 4800 Dr
SF 100 4900 Dr
12 Cheque 115 500 5400 Dr
15 Deposit 850 4550 Dr
20 Cheque 118 600 5150 Dr
Deposit 4050 1100 Dr


Additional information:
  1. Cheque 100 was drawn on the 10 March 2008 to pay a payable. (This cheque is therefore regarded as "stale" for this example - some countries may have different requirements for stale cheques)
  2. ABC Computers signed a debit order for the monthly instalment on their motor vehicle bought from Speedy Car Sales.
  3. Cheque 614 was not drawn by ABC Computers. (Therefore must be taken out of the bank reconciliation)
  4. According to the paid cheques, cheque 112 was drawn for £350 and cheque 113 was drawn for £2070.
  5. A receivable deposited the amount of £4050 owed by him directly into ABC Computers bank account.


Required:
  1. Complete the cash book for September 2009 by starting with the pencil totals.
  2. Prepare the bank reconciliation statement as at 30 September 2009.

Solution

Compare all amounts in the cash book for September 20.9 with the amounts that are present on the bank statement to see if they are the same. All correct amounts should be crossed off on both statements as they do not contain errors. Any erroneous amounts should be marked so that they can be addressed.

Erroneous amounts may include:
  1. Reversed numbers i.e. 164 to 614
  2. Outstanding cheques
  3. Payments received that have not yet been reflected
  4. Errors on cheques
  5. Date discrepancies (though amounts and figures may be correct)


Prepare the following two statements for any bank reconciliation:
Cash book (Bank account) of ABC Computers Dr Cr
Balance b/f 10820
Pencil total 11720 Pencil total 33000
Payable (Cheque 100) 2200 Speedy Car Sales 1400
Purchases and VAT (Cheque 113) 630 Bank Charges and VAT (60+20+100) 180
Receivable 4050
Balance c/f 5160
34580 34580
Balance b/f 5160


Bank reconciliation statement
Bank reconciliation Debit Credit
Balance as per bank statement 1100
Erronerous cheque (614) 2180
Error on cheque 112 (£530-£350) 180
Outstanding deposit 1670
Outstanding cheques:
Cheque 114 4200
Cheque 116 3150
Cheque 106 740
Credit balance as per cash book 5160
9190 9190
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