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Trial balance

Trial balance is a listing of every account in the general ledger with its closing debit or credit balance. Total debits must equal total credits; agreement confirms that entries have been posted symmetrically.

ByHoang TruongUpdated

FrameworkDouble-entry bookkeeping

See it move

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A balance diagram places total debits of €10,600 on the left and total credits of €10,600 on the right, joined by an equals sign. When the two columns match, every debit entry in the ledger has a corresponding credit, confirming that the double-entry rule was applied consistently throughout the period. Equality does not, however, guarantee that entries were posted to the correct accounts — only that no debit or credit was omitted.

Where it fits
SubjectFinancial AccountingCoreTopicDouble-Entry & the Bookkeeping CycleCoreTopicThe Financial StatementsCore

The formula

LaTeX
Di=Ci\sum D_i = \sum C_i

Variables

Sum of all ledger account debit balances ()
Sum of all ledger account credit balances ()

If this equality holds, every journal entry has a matching debit and credit; equality is necessary but not sufficient to confirm error-free records.

Check yourself

PracticeCORE

A bookkeeper prepares a trial balance and finds that total debits equal total credits. Which conclusion is most accurate?

Select an answer to check your understanding.