A trial balance is a list of all the accounts in a business’s general ledger, together with their debit or credit balances at a specific date. Its primary purpose is to verify that the total of all debit balances equals the total of all credit balances, confirming the arithmetical accuracy of the double-entry bookkeeping system.

Section 1: The Purpose of the Trial Balance

1.1 Verification of Accuracy

The fundamental rule of double-entry bookkeeping is that every debit must have a corresponding credit of equal value. If total debits do not equal total credits on the trial balance, at least one error has occurred.

1.2 Foundation for Financial Statements

The trial balance serves as the starting point for preparing the three main financial statements:

1.3 Internal Control Tool

The trial balance is not a statutory document under the Companies Act 2006 or UK accounting standards , but it is a critical internal control. Reviewing the trial balance regularly helps identify unusual balances, posting errors and omissions before the accounts are finalised.

Section 2: Structure of a Trial Balance

A trial balance is presented in a simple two-column format:

AccountDebit (£)Credit (£)
Assets
Property, plant and equipment250,000
Trade receivables45,000
Bank12,000
Inventory30,000
Liabilities
Trade payables28,000
VAT liability6,500
Bank loan100,000
Equity
Share capital50,000
Retained earnings85,000
Revenue
Sales revenue320,000
Expenses
Cost of goods sold180,000
Wages and salaries48,000
Rent12,000
Utilities4,500
Depreciation5,000
Insurance3,000
589,500589,500

The totals balance, confirming arithmetical accuracy.

2.1 Account Classification

Accounts appear on the trial balance in a logical order:

  1. Assets (debit balances) - fixed assets first, then current assets
  2. Liabilities (credit balances) - long-term first, then current
  3. Equity (credit balances) - share capital and retained earnings
  4. Revenue (credit balances) - sales and other income
  5. Expenses (debit balances) - cost of sales, then operating expenses

Section 3: Types of Trial Balance

3.1 Unadjusted Trial Balance

The unadjusted trial balance is extracted from the general ledger before any period-end adjustments are made. It reflects the raw balances from transactions recorded during the period.

3.2 Adjusted Trial Balance

The adjusted trial balance includes all period-end adjustments such as:

  • Accruals for expenses incurred but not yet invoiced
  • Prepayments for expenses paid in advance
  • Depreciation and amortisation charges
  • Bad debt provisions
  • Inventory adjustments

The adjusted trial balance is the version from which the financial statements are prepared.

3.3 Post-Closing Trial Balance

After the year-end closing entries have been processed (transferring revenue and expense balances to retained earnings), a post-closing trial balance is prepared. This contains only balance sheet accounts (assets, liabilities and equity) because all income statement accounts have been reset to zero.

Section 4: What Errors the Trial Balance Detects

A trial balance that does not balance indicates one or more of the following errors:

Error typeExampleTrial balance detects?
Single-sided entryRecording only a debit with no creditYes
Arithmetic error in postingDebiting £1,000 but crediting £100Yes
Posting to wrong sideRecording a debit as a creditYes
Extraction errorIncorrectly copying a balance to the trial balanceYes

Section 5: What Errors the Trial Balance Does NOT Detect

A balanced trial balance does not guarantee error-free accounts. The following errors leave the trial balance in balance:

Error typeExample
Error of omissionA transaction is completely missed
Error of commissionPosted to the wrong account of the same type (e.g., one supplier’s account instead of another)
Error of principleCapital expenditure recorded as an expense
Compensating errorsTwo errors of equal and opposite amounts cancel each other out
Error of original entryThe wrong amount is recorded on both sides
Reversal of entriesDebit and credit are swapped

These errors require other controls to detect, such as bank reconciliations, supplier statement reconciliations and the audit process.

Section 6: Preparing a Trial Balance

6.1 Manual Process

In a manual bookkeeping system, the process is:

  1. Post all transactions from the journal to the general ledger
  2. Calculate the closing balance of each ledger account
  3. List every account with its balance in the appropriate debit or credit column
  4. Total both columns and verify they are equal

6.2 Accounting Software

In modern UK accounting software (Xero, QuickBooks, Sage, FreeAgent), the trial balance is generated automatically at any date with a single click. The software ensures every transaction is double-entry, so the trial balance will always balance mathematically. However, this does not prevent the classification errors described above.

6.3 Frequency

Good practice is to review the trial balance:

  • Monthly as part of the management accounts process
  • Quarterly for VAT return preparation
  • Annually as part of the year-end close and audit preparation

Section 7: Using the Trial Balance in Practice

7.1 Analytical Review

Accountants and auditors use the trial balance for analytical review, comparing current period balances to:

  • The prior year trial balance
  • Budgeted figures
  • Industry benchmarks

Significant or unexpected variances are investigated. For example, if utility expenses have doubled compared to the prior year without an obvious explanation, this warrants further enquiry.

7.2 Adjusting Entries

After reviewing the unadjusted trial balance, the accountant posts adjusting journal entries to correct errors and record period-end items. Common adjustments include:

  • Accruing for unpaid bills (utilities, professional fees)
  • Releasing prepayments (insurance, rent paid in advance)
  • Recording depreciation and amortisation
  • Adjusting inventory to physical count
  • Providing for doubtful debts

7.3 Reconciliation

The trial balance should be reconciled to supporting records:

  • Bank balance to the bank statement
  • Trade receivables to the aged debtor listing
  • Trade payables to the aged creditor listing
  • VAT balance to the VAT return
  • Fixed asset balances to the fixed asset register

Any discrepancies identified during reconciliation must be investigated and resolved before the financial statements are prepared.

Section 8: Trial Balance and Financial Ratios

The trial balance provides all the raw data needed to calculate financial ratios such as:

  • Current ratio from current asset and current liability balances
  • Working capital from the same balances
  • Gross profit margin from revenue and cost of goods sold
  • Debt-to-equity ratio from total liabilities and equity

Section 9: The Trial Balance in the Accounting Cycle

The trial balance appears multiple times in the accounting cycle:

  1. Transactions are identified and recorded in the journal
  2. Journal entries are posted to the general ledger
  3. The unadjusted trial balance is extracted
  4. Adjusting entries are recorded
  5. The adjusted trial balance is prepared
  6. Financial statements are produced from the adjusted trial balance
  7. Closing entries are recorded
  8. The post-closing trial balance is prepared

For a broader view of where the trial balance fits within accounting as a whole , see our introductory article.

Understanding the trial balance is essential for anyone involved in UK bookkeeping, whether preparing monthly management accounts, filing statutory accounts at Companies House, or supporting the annual audit .