Cash-basis accounting is one of the two most common ways of keeping track of a company's revenues and expenses. The other method is accrual-basis accounting.
With cash-basis accounting, revenues are recorded in the accounts when cash is received from customers, and expenses are recorded in the accounts when cash is paid out, regardless of when sales or purchases are invoiced. However, the program updates your vendors, customers, and inventory and services records as soon as you make an entry. These records are always up to date.
Note: Cash sales and purchases in the Sage 50 Accounting program are not related to cash-basis accounting. If you pay an invoice at the time of purchase, it is a cash purchase. If the customer pays at the time of the sale it is a cash sale, no matter what type of accounting is used. Expenses or revenues are recorded in the accounts at the time of a cash purchase or sale, in both accrual-basis and cash-basis accounting.
If you are using cash-basis accounting, do not turn it off to make an accrual-basis entry. Enter a transaction with a date earlier than the Cash Accounting Date instead.
The decision to use cash-basis accounting requires careful consideration. Check with your accountant. If you want, you can switch to cash-basis or to accrual-basis accounting at any time, though you should make this decision carefully.
Some of the things you should consider include:
Note: If you must enter an accrual-basis transaction, date it earlier than the Cash Accounting date. The program treats a purchase or a sale dated earlier than the Cash Accounting date as an accrual-basis entry, and updates the related accounts immediately.
If you must enter an accrual-basis transaction, date it earlier than the Cash Accounting date. The program treats a purchase or a sale dated earlier than the Cash Accounting date as an accrual-basis entry, and updates the related accounts immediately.
After you start using the cash-basis accounting method, you should not change the Cash Accounting date. You may end up with an unexpected mixture of cash-basis and accrual-basis entries in the same time period. Similarly, be sure you do not mix cash-basis and accrual-basis entries in the same time period as a result of changing from one method to another.
Step 3: Finish Entering History (if you haven't already done so)
Learn about entering purchases
Learn about deposits and prepayments