What is a Suspense Account?
A guide to suspense accounts in UK accounting, covering when they are used, how entries are posted, how to clear them, and what to do if a balance remains at the year end.
A suspense account is a temporary holding account in the ledger used to park a transaction when the correct account is not yet known. It keeps the books in balance while the business investigates and determines where the entry should ultimately be posted.
Every transaction must be recorded, but sometimes you receive money or incur a cost without enough information to categorise it properly. Rather than leaving it unrecorded or guessing, you post it to the suspense account and resolve it later.
When to Use a Suspense Account
| Situation | Example |
|---|---|
| Unidentified bank receipt | A payment of £1,500 appears on the bank statement with no reference or remittance advice |
| Incomplete information | An invoice arrives but the correct expense category needs to be confirmed by a manager |
| Difference on the trial balance | The trial balance does not balance and the error cannot be found immediately |
| Partial payment | A customer pays an amount that does not match any outstanding invoice |
| Timing difference | A transaction needs to be recorded today but the supporting documentation will not arrive until next week |
| New account setup | The correct nominal code does not yet exist in the accounting system |
The key principle is that a suspense account is always temporary. It should never carry a permanent balance.
How a Suspense Account Works
Step 1: Post to Suspense
When £2,000 arrives in the bank account and the source is unknown:
| Account | Debit (£) | Credit (£) |
|---|---|---|
| Bank | 2,000 | |
| Suspense account | 2,000 |
The double entry is complete and the books remain in balance.
Step 2: Investigate
The bookkeeper contacts the bank, reviews correspondence, or asks the sales team to identify the payment.
Step 3: Clear the Suspense Account
Once identified as a payment from Customer X against invoice 1045:
| Account | Debit (£) | Credit (£) |
|---|---|---|
| Suspense account | 2,000 | |
| Accounts receivable – Customer X | 2,000 |
The suspense account now has a zero balance and the customer’s account correctly reflects the payment.
Suspense Accounts and the Trial Balance
One of the most common uses of a suspense account is to deal with a trial balance difference. If total debits do not equal total credits and the error cannot be found immediately, the difference is posted to a suspense account so the trial balance balances.
Example: The trial balance shows total debits of £485,600 and total credits of £486,100, a difference of £500.
| Account | Debit (£) | Credit (£) |
|---|---|---|
| Suspense account | 500 |
This temporary entry balances the trial balance while the bookkeeper searches for the error.
Common Errors That Cause Trial Balance Differences
| Error Type | Effect |
|---|---|
| Single-sided entry | Only the debit or credit was posted, not both |
| Transposition error | Digits reversed (e.g., £540 posted as £450) |
| Casting error | An account balance was added up incorrectly |
| Extraction error | The wrong balance was transferred from the ledger to the trial balance |
| Omission of one side | The journal entry was partially completed |
Note that some errors (such as posting to the wrong account with the correct amount) do not cause a trial balance difference and will not be revealed by a suspense account. These require other checks to detect.
Clearing a Suspense Account
The process for clearing suspense items follows a consistent pattern:
- Review every item in the suspense account regularly (weekly at minimum)
- Investigate each item – check bank statements, contact customers or suppliers, review invoices
- Identify the correct account and amount
- Post a correcting journal entry to move the amount from suspense to the correct account
- Document the reason for the original suspense posting and the resolution
Worked Example: Multiple Suspense Items
A company’s suspense account contains three items at month end:
| Date | Description | Amount (£) |
|---|---|---|
| 5 Mar | Unidentified bank receipt | 3,200 Cr |
| 12 Mar | Invoice without purchase order | 850 Cr |
| 18 Mar | Trial balance difference | 150 Dr |
Resolution:
The £3,200 is identified as a payment from Customer Y for invoice 2089:
| Account | Debit (£) | Credit (£) |
|---|---|---|
| Suspense | 3,200 | |
| Accounts receivable – Customer Y | 3,200 |
The £850 invoice is confirmed as office supplies:
| Account | Debit (£) | Credit (£) |
|---|---|---|
| Suspense | 850 | |
| Office supplies expense | 850 | |
| Accounts payable | 850 |
Wait – the original entry already credited suspense. We need to debit suspense to remove the credit balance:
| Account | Debit (£) | Credit (£) |
|---|---|---|
| Suspense | 850 | |
| Administrative expenses | 850 | |
| Accounts payable | 1,700 |
The £150 difference is traced to a transposition error – electricity of £960 was posted as £810:
| Account | Debit (£) | Credit (£) |
|---|---|---|
| Utilities expense | 150 | |
| Suspense | 150 |
After all three corrections, the suspense account balance is zero.
Suspense Accounts at Year End
A suspense account should ideally have a zero balance at the year end. If items remain unresolved:
- Small immaterial amounts may be written off to miscellaneous income or expense with appropriate approval
- Material amounts must be investigated further and disclosed in the notes to the accounts if they could affect the true and fair view
- Auditors will scrutinise any suspense balance as part of their year-end audit procedures
Under FRS 102, financial statements must give a true and fair view. A material unexplained suspense balance undermines this requirement.
Suspense Account in the Chart of Accounts
Most accounting software includes a default suspense account in the chart of accounts. In a typical UK chart of accounts, it might appear as:
| Code | Account Name | Type |
|---|---|---|
| 9998 | Suspense account | Current liability or current asset (depending on balance) |
Some businesses maintain multiple suspense accounts for different purposes:
- Bank suspense – for unidentified bank transactions
- Sales suspense – for unallocated customer payments
- Purchase suspense – for invoices awaiting approval
- Payroll suspense – for payroll differences awaiting investigation
Suspense Account vs Other Temporary Accounts
| Account | Purpose | Permanent? |
|---|---|---|
| Suspense | Holds transactions pending classification | No – must be cleared |
| Clearing account | Used in multi-step processes (e.g., payroll clearing) | No – cleared each cycle |
| Accruals | Recognises expenses incurred but not yet invoiced | Semi-permanent – reversed and re-posted each period |
| Prepayments | Recognises payments made for future periods | Semi-permanent – released over time |
Managing Suspense Accounts Effectively
Set a Policy
Define a maximum age for suspense items. Common thresholds:
| Business Size | Maximum Age Before Escalation |
|---|---|
| Small (under 10 employees) | 2 weeks |
| Medium (10-50 employees) | 1 week |
| Large (50+ employees) | 3 business days |
Assign Responsibility
Every suspense item should have a named person responsible for resolving it. Unowned items tend to remain in suspense indefinitely.
Review Regularly
Include suspense account review in your month-end checklist. The goal is a zero balance at each month end, not just at year end.
Use Accounting Software Features
Modern accounting software allows you to flag transactions for review without posting them to a formal suspense account. Bank feed rules, automated matching and AI-assisted categorisation can significantly reduce the number of items that end up in suspense.
Maintain an Audit Trail
For every item that passes through the suspense account, keep a record of:
- The original posting date and amount
- Why it was posted to suspense
- Who investigated it
- The resolution and correcting journal reference
- The date it was cleared
This documentation satisfies both internal controls and external audit requirements.