Balancing your purchase creditors ledger in the UK | DNS CloudCo

Balancing your purchase (creditors) ledger

Balancing your purchase creditors ledger is essential for maintaining accurate financial records and strong supplier relationships. This process helps ensure that all supplier invoices, payments, and credits are correctly recorded, preventing costly discrepancies and cash flow issues. Whether you’re a small business or a large enterprise, understanding how to properly reconcile your creditors ledger can significantly enhance your financial control and decision-making

In a purchase ledger control account, the total outstanding invoices at the beginning of a period and invoices received during that period, less payments made for invoiced supplies, will give a balancing figure of invoices still outstanding at the end of the period – your creditors. You can compare the figure with your listing of unpaid invoices, and thereby detect any errors.

The control account
 Debit £Credit £
Creditors at beginning of period
(Unpaid invoices at beginning of period equal
to closing balances for previous period)
 7632.95
Total invoices in period
(Total of purchase day book list of invoices – gross figure)
 12687.32
Total payments in period
(Total of purchase cash book for invoiced expenses)
10750.61 
Creditors at end of period
(Balance figure, which should agree with prepared list)
9569.66 
 20320.2720320.27

If your creditors list does not agree with the control account, check the following points:

Have you listed all your creditors, including those invoices only partly paid or outstanding from the beginning of the period, and those invoices paid directly after the end of the period, because these payments would not be in the cash book?

  • Credit notes – does your total of invoices in the period include credit notes received? If not, these must be included on the credit side of the account
  • Payments from cash book – these should be only those that relate to invoiced expenses, not items such as wages, interest, etc. If included, these figures should be taken off the payments figure in the control account
  • Discounts – purchases where a discount reduces the payment below the invoiced amount should have the discount in the control account
  • Those payments for purchases that were not entered into the cash book will have to be included as a payment on the control account
  • Addition error of payments, invoices, or creditors totals, or duplication of invoices, payments, or creditors in listings
The amended purchase ledger control account might look as follows:
 £Debit £Credit £
Creditors at beginning of period  7632.95
Total invoices  12687.32
Credit notes 382.27 
Total payments10750.61  
Addition error(57.09)10693.52 
 
Payments made from private account 657.90 
Discounts received 249.61 
Creditors at end of period 8336.97 
  20320.2720320.27
Reconciliation   
Original creditors figure per list 7491.07 
Creditor paid after period not on list 972.79 
Creditor included twice (176.25) 
Invoice paid short, amount still outstanding 49.36 
  8336.97 
Divyanshi Patel
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Divyanshi is a subject matter expert in the UK accounting space, creating clear and easy-to-read content for accountants and businesses. She covers topics such as VAT returns, Self-assessment tax, bookkeeping, business planning and Year-end accounts. By understanding the common challenges faced by accountants and business owners, she focuses on writing content that answers real questions and simplifies complex topics. Her approach keeps information clear, relevant and useful for everyday business needs.

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