Accounting Basics

How to Prepare a Journal Entry: Components, Direction, and Narration

Illustration for Preparing a Journal Entry
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Recording Fundamentals Accounting Cycle Basics

How to Prepare and Record Journal Entries Correctly

Recording a journal entry is the first and most critical step in the accounting cycle. If the entry is recorded incorrectly, all subsequent reports—the ledger, trial balance, and even the final financial statements—will be misleading. In this article, we explain how to build a professional journal entry: What are its basic components? How do you apply the Debit and Credit rules in real-world scenarios? And how do you write a professional narration that makes audits easy?

Illustrative design for recording journal entries showing columns of debit, credit, and narration.
A professional journal entry is a “story” told in the language of numbers and accounts.
What will you learn in this guide?
  • A clear definition of a Journal Entry and its role in the Documentary Cycle.
  • The 5 essential components of every professional entry.
  • Mastering Entry Direction using the account nature rule.
  • Visual model (SVG) of a standard journal entry template.
  • Practical examples of common entries (Purchases, Sales, Capital).
  • Tips for writing a Professional Narration (Description).
  • A checklist to verify the entry before posting to the ledger.
Contextual Link: To understand the logic behind these entries, read Double-Entry System and Documentary Cycle first.

1) What is a Journal Entry?

A Journal Entry is a formal chronological record of a financial transaction. It is the bridge that converts a physical document (like an invoice or receipt) into data that can be processed in the accounting system.

The Golden Rule: No Entry without a Document. If you don’t have proof, you cannot record the transaction.

2) The 5 Basic Components of an Entry

Every entry, whether in a manual book or an ERP system, must contain:

  1. Date: The day the transaction actually occurred.
  2. Debit Side (Dr.): The account receiving the value and its amount.
  3. Credit Side (Cr.): The account giving the value and its amount.
  4. Narration: A concise explanation summarizing the transaction details.
  5. Reference/Document ID: Linking the entry to the source invoice or voucher number.

3) Rules for Directing the Entry (Debit vs. Credit)

To direct an entry correctly, you must know the Nature of the account:

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Account Category Natural Balance To INCREASE To DECREASE
Assets & Expenses Debit Debit (Dr.) Credit (Cr.)
Liabilities, Equity, Revenue Credit Credit (Cr.) Debit (Dr.)

4) Visual Model of a Journal Entry

General Journal Template Structure Date Account Description Debit ($) Credit ($) Jan 15 Account Name (The Taker) 1,500.00 Account Name (The Giver) 1,500.00 Narration: Being cash purchase of equipment per Inv #123.
The indented credit account name is a standard professional practice in manual entries.

5) Practical Real-World Examples

Case A: Cash Purchase of Inventory ($2,000)

Logic: Inventory (Asset) increases ⇒ Debit. Cash (Asset) decreases ⇒ Credit.

  • Dr. Inventory 2,000
  • Cr. Cash 2,000
  • (Narration: Cash purchase of stock from Alpha Co.)

Case B: Credit Sale of Goods ($5,000)

Logic: Receivables (Asset) increases ⇒ Debit. Sales (Revenue) increases ⇒ Credit.

  • Dr. Accounts Receivable 5,000
  • Cr. Sales Revenue 5,000
  • (Narration: Credit sale to Customer XYZ per Inv #88.)

6) Professional Narration Tips

The narration shouldn’t be long, but it must answer: What happened? To whom? And what’s the proof?

  • Bad: “Paid money.”
  • Better: “Paid rent for January.”
  • Professional: “Payment of Jan rent to Building Management Corp per Check #4001.”

8) Pre-Posting Verification Checklist

Before you hit “Save” or “Post,” ask:
  • Do total Debits exactly equal total Credits? ✅
  • Is the Date correct and within the open period? ✅
  • Are the Account Names selected correctly from the Chart of Accounts? ✅
  • Is there a Reference Number linking to a physical document? ✅

9) Frequently Asked Questions

Can an entry have more than two accounts?

Yes, this is called a “Compound Entry,” but the total debits must still balance the total credits.

What if I make a mistake in a posted entry?

Never delete it. Instead, record a “Correcting Entry” to reverse the error and record the correct transaction with a clear explanation.

10) Conclusion

Mastering journal entries is the foundation of accounting excellence. By following a structured approach—verifying documents, applying nature rules, and writing clear narrations—you ensure that your company’s financial story is accurate and auditable.

Your Next Step: Try practicing the entries for your last 5 business transactions. Did you include all the 5 basic components?

© Digital Salla Articles — General educational content. For professional audit or complex transaction directing, consult a certified accountant.