While the general public and business people are
familiar with the general accounts that appear in the financial
statements, many owners, executives, and other non-accounting personnel
often ignore the lesser known accounts that are called Contra Accounts.
Contra Accounts are accounts
that are matched or paired to a related account and subtracted from it.
These bookkeeping accounts are included in the company's chart of
accounts. Often they might just be called ledger accounts or GL
accounts.
If we see in a balance sheet:
Equipment
........................................$120,000
Less: Accumulated depreciation...........
20,000..... 100,000
Accumulated depreciation is the 'contra account,'
and 'Equipment,' the related account.
Balance sheet contra accounts:
Accumulated
depreciation........................... contra-asset
Accumulated
depletion................................ contra-asset
Drawing.....................................................
contra-capital
Allowance for doubtful accounts...................
contra-asset
Discount on bonds
payable.........................contra-liability
Income statement contra accounts:
Sales returns and allowances......................
contra-revenue
Sales
discounts.......................................... contra-revenue
Purchase returns and allowances.................
contra-cost
Purchase
discounts..................................... contra-cost
All accounts have what is known as a 'Normal
Balance.' The normal balance of an account corresponds to the side in
which the account is increased. To fully understand this concept, let's
have a refresher of the rules of accounting:
Rule of Accounting 1, for assets:
Increases in assets are recorded by debits to the
asset accounts. Decreases in assets are recorded by credits to the
assets accounts.
Rule of Accounting 2, for liabilities:
Increases in liabilities are recorded by credits
to the liability accounts. Decreases in liabilities are recorded by
debits to the liability accounts.
Rule of Accounting 3, for owner's equity:
Increases in owner's equity are recorded by
credits to the owner's equity accounts. Decreases in owner's equity are
recorded by debits to the owner's equity accounts.
According to the above rules, assets are increased
by debits; liabilities and owner's equity by credits. It follows then
that the normal balance of all assets is debit, and for liabilities and
owner's equity accounts the normal balance is credit.
To illustrate: Cash is an asset account;
therefore, its normal balance is debit. Now, if for some reason the
cash account shows a credit balance, then credit would be 'abnormal.'
The explanation could be that we have overdrawn the account. Or perhaps
it is a mistake such as a misposting.
Now, in the case of the contra accounts, they will
have a normal balance that is the opposite of their related account. If
we focus on the above example where we show Equipment $120,000. We can
now say that the normal balance of Accumulated depreciation is credit
(the opposite of the related account Equipment).
We are now prepared to give a full definition:
A contra account is an account that is
matched or paired to a related account and subtracted from it.
Therefore, its normal balance is the opposite of the related account.
Article Source:
http://www.articlesbase.com/small-business-articles/contra-accounts-8-
workhorses-of-bookkeeping-and-accounting-1126939.html About the Author
Retired. Former investment banker, Columbia
University-educated, Vietnam Vet (67-68).
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