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For each separate case below, follow the three-step process for adjusting the accrued expense account at

December 31. Step 1: Determine what the current account balance equals. Step 2: Determine what the

current account balance should equal. Step 3: Record the December 31 adjusting entry to get from step 1

to step 2. Assume no other adjusting entries are made during the year.

a. Salaries Payable. At year-end, salaries expense of \(15,500 has been incurred by the company but arenot yet paid to employees.

b. Interest Payable. At its December 31 year-end, the company owes \)250 of interest on a line-of-credit

loan. That interest will not be paid until sometime in January of the next year.

c. Interest Payable. At its December 31 year-end, the company holds a mortgage payable that has incurred$875 in annual interest that is neither recorded nor paid. The company intends to pay the intereston January 7 of the next year.

Short Answer

Expert verified

Interest expense account debit and interest payable credit with $250

Step by step solution

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01

Definition of interest payable

Interest payable mean interest is due but not paid.

02

The current account balance equals

Interest payable, current account equals $0.

03

The current account balance should equal

Interest payable, current account should equal $250

04

Adjusting entry

Journal entry

Date

Particulars

Debit

Credit

December 31

Interest Expense

$250

Interest Payable

$250

(Adjustment entry for the interest expense)

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Adjusting entries affect at least one balance sheet account and at least one income statement account.

For the entries below, identify the account to be debited and the account to be credited from the following

accounts: Cash; Accounts Receivable; Prepaid Insurance; Equipment; Accumulated

Depreciation; Wages Payable; Unearned Revenue; Revenue; Wages Expense; Insurance Expense;

Depreciation Expense. Indicate which of the accounts is the income statement account and which is

the balance sheet account.

a. Entry to record revenue earned that was previously received as cash in advance.

b. Entry to record wage expenses incurred but not yet paid (nor recorded).

c. Entry to record revenue earned but not yet billed (nor recorded).

d. Entry to record expiration of prepaid insurance.

e. Entry to record annual depreciation expense.

List the following steps of the accounting cycle in their proper order.

a. Posting the journal entries.

b. Journalizing and posting adjusting entries.

c. Preparing the adjusted trial balance.

d. Journalizing and posting closing entries.

e. Analyzing transactions and events.

f. Preparing the financial statements.

g. Preparing the unadjusted trial balance.

h. Journalizing transactions and events.

i. Preparing the post-closing trial balance

What is an accrued revenue? Give an example

Cal Consulting follows the practice that prepayments are debited to expense when paid, and unearned

revenues are credited to revenue when cash is received. Given this companyโ€™s accounting practices,

which one of the following applies to the preparation of adjusting entries at the end of its first accounting

period?

a. Unearned fees (on which cash was received in advance earlier in the period) are recorded with a debit

to Consulting Fees Earned of \(500 and a credit to Unearned Consulting Fees of \)500.

b. Unpaid salaries of \(400 are recorded with a debit to Prepaid Salaries of \)400 and a credit to Salaries

Expense of \(400.

c. Office supplies purchased for the period were \)1,000. The cost of unused office supplies of \(650 is

recorded with a debit to Supplies Expense of \)650 and a credit to Office Supplies of \(650.

d. Earned but unbilled (and unrecorded) consulting fees for the period were \)1,200, which are recorded

with a debit to Unearned Consulting Fees of \(1,200 and a credit to Consulting Fees Earned

of \)1,200.

Question: The following three separate situations require adjusting journal entries to prepare financial statements as

of April 30. For each situation, present both:

โˆ™ The April 30 adjusting entry.

โˆ™ The subsequent entry during May to record payment of the accrued expenses.

Entries can draw from the following partial chart of accounts: Cash; Accounts Receivable; Prepaid

Interest; Salaries Payable; Interest Payable; Legal Services Payable; Unearned Revenue; Revenue; Salaries

Expense; Interest Expense; Legal Services Expense; Depreciation Expense.

a. On April 1, the company retained an attorney for a flat monthly fee of \(3,500. Payment for April legal

services was made by the company on May 12.

b. A \)900,000 note payable requires 12% annual interest, or \(9,000, to be paid at the 20th day of each

month. The interest was last paid on April 20, and the next payment is due on May 20. As of April 30,

\)3,000 of interest expense has accrued.

c. Total weekly salaries expense for all employees is $10,000. This amount is paid at the end of the day

on Friday of each five-day workweek. April 30 falls on a Tuesday, which means that the employees

had worked two days since the last payday. The next payday is May 3.

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