Temporary accounts include assets, expenses, and the owner’s drawing account.

Closing entries take place at the end of an accounting cycle as a set of journal entries. The closing entries serve to transfer these temporary account balances to permanent entries on the company's balance sheet. This resets the balance of the temporary accounts to zero, ready to begin the next accounting period.

The balance sheet's assets, liabilities, and owner's equity accounts, however, are not closed. These permanent accounts and their ending balances act as the beginning balances for the next accounting period. 

Key Takeaways

  • Closing entries are performed at the end of an accounting cycle and are a way to close out the balances of temporary accounts.
  • Temporary accounts that close each cycle include revenue, expense, and dividends accounts.
  • There are typically four steps to closing entries that involve debiting and crediting certain accounts.

The Purpose of Closing Entries

A term often used for closing entries is "reconciling" the company's accounts. Accountants perform closing entries to return the revenue, expense, and drawing temporary account balances to zero in preparation for the new accounting period.

The closing entries are also recorded so that the company's retained earnings account shows any actual increase in revenues from the prior year and also shows any decreases from dividend payments and expenses.

Retained earnings are those earnings not distributed to shareholders as dividends, but retained for further investment, often in advertising, sales, production, and equipment

The Income Summary Account

The income summary account serves as a temporary account used only during the closing process. It contains all the company's revenues and expenses for the current accounting time period. In other words, it contains net income or the earnings figure that remains after subtracting all business expenses, depreciation, debt service expense, and taxes. The income summary account doesn't factor in when preparing financial statements because its only purpose is to be used during the closing process.

Four Steps to Complete Closing Entries

Complete the closing entries using the following steps:

  1. Locate the revenue accounts in the trial balance, which lists all of the revenue and capital accounts in the company's ledger. You will see that they have a credit balance. To return them to zero, you must perform a debit entry for each revenue account to move the balance to the income summary account. 
  2. Locate the expense accounts in the trial balance. You will see that they have a debit balance. Perform a credit entry for each expense account to the income summary account, to return the expense account totals to zero. 
  3. If the income summary account has a credit balance after completing the entries, or the credit entry amounts exceeded the debits, the company has a net income. If the debit balance exceeds the credits the company has a net loss. Now, the income summary must be closed to the retained earnings account. Perform a journal entry to debit the income summary account and credit the retained earnings account.
  4. The last step involves closing the dividend account to retained earnings. The dividend account has a normal debit balance. Credit the dividend account and debit the retained earnings account. Retained earnings now reflect the appropriate amount of net income that was allocated to it.

For most companies, this completes the accounting cycle for the current time period.

Closing Entry Shortcuts and Software Handling

The four-step method described above works well because it provides a clear audit trail. For smaller businesses, it might make sense to bypass the income summary account and instead close temporary entries directly to the retained earnings account.

The end result is equally accurate, with temporary accounts closed to the retained earnings account for presentation in the company's balance sheet.

In some cases, accounting software might automatically handle the transfer of balances to an income summary account, once the user closes the accounting period. The entries take place "behind the scenes," often with no income summary account showing in the chart of accounts or other transaction records.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What are closing entries?

Closing entries are journal entries you make at the end of an accounting cycle that movie temporary account balances to permanent entries on your company's balance sheet.

What are the four closing entries in order?

The four closing entries are, generally speaking, revenue accounts to income summary, expense accounts to income summary, income summary to retained earnings, and dividend accounts to retained earnings.

What are temporary accounts quizlet?

Temporary Accounts. Income Statement Accounts that are closed out to a zero balance at the end of an accounting Period. Permanent Accounts. Balance Sheet Accounts that retain a perpetual balance. It is never closed out to zero.

Which of the following is a temporary account?

Temporary accounts include revenue accounts, expenses accounts, and withdrawal accounts. On the other hand, the assets, liabilities, and capital accounts have permanent balances.

Is the drawing account is a permanent account?

The drawings account is not a continuing or permanent record in the sense that, at the end of the financial year, it is balanced out in the general ledger with a credit, and the balance is transferred to the total capital or owner's equity side of the balance sheet with a debit.

What are the characteristics of a temporary account quizlet?

Temporary accounts measure net income and include revenues, gains, expenses and losses. Therefore they are always closed at the end of each accounting period and net income is moved to Retained Earnings. Each new accounting period begins with a zero balance in these accounts.