Journal in accounting definition

What is a Journal in Accounting?

A journal is a place of record in which business transactions are recorded in chronological order. A firm may use several specialized journals, such as a purchases journal or sales journal, to separately record transactions in the more high-volume areas. The general journal is used to record more general, lower-volume transactions. Once entered into a journal, transactions are then posted to general ledger accounts. Journals are the best source of information when researching the nature of business transactions, since they identify source documents.

Entries made into a journal employ double-entry accounting, where balancing debits and credits are used. The entries also state the date, accounts impacted, and amounts, as well as an identifier for the source document.

Types of Accounting Journals

An accounting department will typically only use a journal to store specific types of transactions for which there is a high transaction volume level. This tends to restrict the number of journals to a small group, which are as follows:

  • Cash payments journal. Used to record all types of cash payments made by the organization.

  • Cash receipts journal. Used to record all cash receipts by the organization.

  • Purchases journal. Used to record all purchases made by the organization.

  • Sales journal. Used to record the sale of all goods and services by the organization.

In addition, the general journal is used to record all other transactions that are not recorded in these more specialized accounting journals.

Related AccountingTools Courses

Bookkeeper Education Bundle

Bookkeeping Guidebook