Section 3
ACCRUED EXPENSES (ACCRUED LIABILITIES)
Introduction
            Accrued expenses are expenses that have been incurred, but not yet paid for.
            To put it another way, an accrued expense is paid after being recorded on
            the books. Every adjusting entry for accrued expenses debits an expense
            account, increasing expenses on the income statement and reducing net
            income, and credits a payable account, increasing liabilities on the balance
            sheet.
How to Record Accrued Expenses
            The general entry to record an accrued expense is:
            [Various Titles] Expense         (income statement expense account)
               [Various Titles] Payable           (balance sheet liability account)
            To accrue                expense
Examples of Accrued Expenses
            Accrued expenses include the following:
                   • Interest owed but not yet paid on borrowed funds.
                     Interest Expense
                          Interest Payable
                   • Rent owed, but not yet paid.
                     Rent Expense
                         Rent Payable
                   • Commissions and royalties owed but not yet paid.
                     Commission [or Royalty] Expense
                        Commission [or Royalty] Payable
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Mastering Adjusting Entries
                       • Utility and telephone bills owed, but not yet paid:
                         Utilities [or Telephone] Expense
                              Utilities [or Telephone] Payable
                       • Salary and wage expense owed, but not yet paid.
                         Salaries Expense*
                             Salaries Payable
                         *Many companies use “Salaries Expense” for employees paid by the week and
                         “Wages Expense” for employees paid by the hour.
                       • Property and other taxes owed, but not yet paid.
                         Property [or Federal Income, State Income, etc.] Tax Expense
                             Property [or Federal Income, State Income, etc.] Tax Payable
How Failure to Make the
Adjustment Affects the
Financial Statements
               Failure to record an adjusting entry will have the following impacts on the
               financial statements:
                       • Liabilities will be understated on the balance sheet (because the
                         omitted entry increases a liability account);
                       • Expenses will be understated on the income statement (because the
                         entry increases an expense account); and, as a result,
                       • Net income will be overstated on the income statement.
Sample Problems
                       PROBLEM 1: GuCo pays sales reps a 5% commission on sales. GuCo
                       had 19X5 sales of $500,000, but paid only $21,000 in commissions.
                       How much does GuCo accrue in commissions on December 31?
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                                                     Accrued Expenses (Accrued Liabilities)
                 SOLUTION 1: To compute: $500,000 sales for 19X5 x 5% = $25,000
                 commissions payable in 19X5. $25,000 payable – $21,000 actually
                 paid = $4,000 accrued commissions. The adjusting journal entry is:
                 Commissions Expense                                 4,000
                    Commissions Payable                                      4,000
                 To accrue 19X5 commissions
                 PROBLEM 2: On December 31, SuCo receives a $740 phone bill that
                 it will pay the following month. What entry does SuCo record on De-
                 cember 31?
                 SOLUTION 2: On December 31, SuCo records the following adjusting
                 entry:
                 Telephone Expense                                     740
                    Telephone Payable                                          740
                 To accrue telephone expense
                 PROBLEM 3: RaCo pays employees weekly on Friday. But 19X7 ends
                 on a Wednesday. If, for the last week of the year, gross payroll is
                 $10,000, how much does RaCo accrue for salary expense?
                 SOLUTION 3: RaCo must accrue 19X7 salary expense for 3 of the
                 5 days, Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, which is 60% (3/5) of the
                 week. To compute accrued payroll expense (payroll expense incurred
                 but not paid) for the last week of 19X7: $10,000 x 60% = $6,000 accrued
                 payroll expense for 19X7. (The remaining $4,000 of payroll expense for
                 the week will be incurred in 19X8.)
                 RaCo’s accrued payroll expense is recorded with an adjusting entry in
                 the general journal as of the last day of the business year:
                 Salaries Expense                                    6,000
                    Salaries Payable                                         6,000
                 To accrue salaries at year end
                 Without this entry, the company’s 19X7 net income would be over-
                 stated because the expense would not have been recorded for 19X7.
                 Also, 19X7 liabilities would be understated.
Accruing Interest Payable
          Interest payable is accrued in the same way as interest receivable. On a
          short-term note, the interest accrues (builds up) and is usually paid along
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Mastering Adjusting Entries
               with the principal on the note’s due date. On a long-term note, the interest is
               paid periodically, such as each month. If the accounting period ends before
               the interest is paid, interest expense is accrued on the last day of that period.
               The formula to compute interest for a period is:
               Face amount (principal) x annual interest rate x fraction of year =
               accrued interest
               When a company gives a note to borrow money, the first entry is for the note:
               Cash
                  Note Payable
               To record note payable
               Subsequently, interest expense is accrued with the following entry:
               Interest Expense
                  Interest Payable
               To accrue interest expense
                       PROBLEM 4: On November 1, 19X6, MiCo, which uses a calendar
                       year, borrows $100,000 at 12% interest. How much interest expense
                       should MiCo accrue as of December 31, 19X6, and how does it record
                       the accrual on that day?
                       SOLUTION 4: To compute interest accrued as of December 31:
                       $100,000 principal x 12% annual interest = $12,000 x 2/12 (for Novem-
                       ber and December) = $2,000 accrued interest as of December 31. The
                       adjusting entry in the general journal on December 31 is:
                       Interest Expense                                   2,000
                          Interest Payable                                      2,000
                       To accrue 2 months’ interest ($100,000 x 12% x 2/12)
                       The interest expense is recorded as of December 31 because the
                       expense is incurred (owed, but not paid) as of the last day of the period.
               Note that in all three problems, the adjusting entry increases an expense
               account, which reduces net income on the income statement, and increases a
               liability account, which increases liabilities on the balance sheet.
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                                                        Accrued Expenses (Accrued Liabilities)
QUIZ 1       ACCRUED EXPENSES (ACCRUED LIABILITIES)
Problem I.
             Make the following adjusting journal entries:
             1. Accrue interest expense of $3,000
             2. Accrue property tax expense of $1,200
             3. Accrue salaries expense of $10,000
Problem II.
             1. Your company has a 6-day workweek and payday is Saturday. Weekly
                salaries are $12,000, and your company contributes to each employee’s
                pension by contributing 3% of salaries to the Pension Fund account. Make
                the adjusting journal entries when the accounting period ends on a
                Tuesday.
             2. What adjusting entry (if any) do you record if the accounting period ends
                on a Saturday?
Problem III.
             Your payroll for the last week of the year (your company uses a 5-day
             workweek) is $40,000 and December 31 falls on a Thursday. Record the
             adjusting journal entry at year end.
Problem IV.
             Your company borrows $50,000 on a 6-month, 12% note on October 1. Year
             end is November 30. Record the accrued interest at November 30.
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Problem V.
               Multiple choice. Circle the correct answer.
               1. What kind of account is Taxes Payable?
                       a.   asset
                       b.   liability
                       c.   revenue
                       d.   expense
               2. If a company forgets to accrue utilities expense at year end, how does it
                  affect net income?
                       a. Net income will be overstated.
                       b. Net income will be understated.
                       c. Net income will be unaffected.
               3. If a company fails to record an adjusting entry for property taxes, then
                  net income will be . . .
                       a.   unaffected
                       b.   understated
                       c.   overstated
                       d.   understated or overstated depending on the amount
               4. An accrued expense is one that is incurred but not yet paid.
                       a. True          b. False
               5. With an accrued expense, payment follows recognition of the expense.
                       a. True          b. False
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                                                      Accrued Expenses (Accrued Liabilities)
Problem VI.
          Fill in the blanks.
          1. An accrued expense is one that has been                   but not
                         .
          2. An expense is accrued by debiting a(n)                  account and
             crediting a(n)             account.
          3. An adjusting entry to accrue an expense (increases/decreases) net income.
          4. An expense recorded as incurred but not paid is presented as a(n)
                         on the balance sheet.
Problem VII.
          Record the adjusting entries and any transaction entries on December 31 for
          each of the following:
          1. On December 31, 19X1, FaCo incurs wage expense of $8,000 for
             December 29-31 that has not been either recorded or paid.
          2. Rent for December of $2,300 will be paid on January 2.
          3. Of the $1,000 in commissions payable on December 31, only $400 was
             paid.
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Mastering Adjusting Entries
QUIZ 1 Solutions and Explanations
     Problem I.
                   1. Interest Expense                                               3,000
                         Interest Payable                                                     3,000
                      To accrue interest expense
                   2. Property Taxes                                                 1,200
                         Property Taxes Payable                                               1,200
                      To accrue property tax expense
                   3. Salaries Expense                                              10,000
                         Salaries Payable                                                    10,000
                      To accrue salaries expense
     Problem II.
                   1. Salaries Expense                                               4,000*
                         Salaries Payable                                                     4,000
                      To accrue salaries expense
                       *$12,000 weekly payroll/6 days = $2,000 per day x 2 days (Monday and Tuesday)
                       = $4,000
                       Pension Expense                                                 120*
                          Pension Payable                                                          120
                       To accrue pension expense
                       *$4,000 accrued salaries expense x 3% pension contribution = $120 pension
                       expense
                   2. If the workweek ends on a Saturday, the company will pay salaries
                      for the entire week, so no salaries accrue (accrued expenses are
                      expenses incurred before they are paid). Thus, no adjusting entry
                      is recorded; only an ordinary transaction entry is needed.
                      However, pension contributions might accrue depending on the
                      rules of the particular plan.
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                                                          Accrued Expenses (Accrued Liabilities)
Problem III.
                Wages (or Salaries) Expense                                  32,000*
                   Wages (or Salaries) Payable                                      32,000
                To accrue wages (or salaries)
                *$40,000 payroll x 4/5 of the week (Monday – Thursday) = $32,000 payroll
                expense accrued for the week.
Problem IV.
                Interest Expense                                     1,000
                   Interest Payable                                         1,000
                To accrue 2 months’ interest expense ($50,000 x 12% x 2/12)
Problem V.
             1. b
                A payable account is a liability.
             2. a
                When a company does not record an expense, expenses are
                understated (too low) on the income statement, and net income is
                overstated (too high).
             3. c
                Because not all expenses are on the books, net income will be
                overstated.
             4. a
             5. a
Problem VI.
             1. incurred, paid
             2. expense, payable (or liability)
             3. decreases
             4. liability
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Mastering Adjusting Entries
     Problem VII.
                   On December 31, 19X1, FaCo records the following adjusting entries:
                   1. $8,000 in accrued wages (stated in the data) have been accrued:
                       Wages Expense                                          8,000
                          Wages Payable                                               8,000
                       To accrue wages expense
                   2. $2,300 in accrued rent:
                       Rent Expense                                           2,300
                          Rent Payable                                                2,300
                       To accrue rent expense
                   3. There is a transaction entry for the commissions paid:
                       Commissions Expense                                     400
                         Cash                                                          400
                       There is an adjusting entry for accrued commissions:
                       Commissions Expense                                     600*
                          Commissions Payable                                          600
                       To accrue commissions expense
                       *$1,000 commissions owed – $400 paid = $600 accrued.
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                                    Accrued Expenses (Accrued Liabilities)
QUIZ 2   ACCRUED EXPENSES (ACCRUED LIABILITIES)
                        NOT SHOWN
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