Prepare Financial Reporting with Account Schedules and Account Categories
Use account schedules to get insight into the financial data stored in your chart of accounts. Account schedules analyze figures in G/L accounts, and compare general ledger entries with general ledger budget entries. The results display in charts on your Role Center, such as the Cash Flow chart, and in reports, such as the Income Statement and the Balance Sheet reports.
You access these two reports, for example, with the Financials Statements action on the Business Manager and Accountant Role Centers.
Business Central provides a few sample account schedules that you can use right away, or you can set up your own rows and columns to specify the figures to compare. For example, you can create account schedules to calculate profit margins on dimensions like departments or customer groups. You can create as many customized financial statements as you want.
Setting up account schedules requires an understanding of the financial data in the chart of accounts. For example, you can view general ledger entries as percentages of budget entries. This requires that budgets are created. For more information, see Create G/L Budgets.
Account Schedules
Account schedules are used to arrange accounts listed in the chart of accounts in ways suited for presentation of information about those accounts. You can set up various layouts to define the information that you want to extract from the chart of accounts. One of the main functions of account schedules is to provide a place for calculations that cannot be made directly in the chart of accounts, such as creating subtotals for groups of accounts, which can be included in new totals and can then be used in other totals. For example, users can create account schedules to calculate profit margins on such dimensions as departments or customer groups. In addition, general ledger entries and general ledger budget entries can be filtered, for example, by net change or debit amount.
You can also compare two or more account schedules and column layouts by using formulas. This kind of comparison provides the ability to:
- Create customized financial reports.
- Create as many account schedules as needed, each with a unique name.
- Set up various report layouts and print the reports with the current figures.
G/L Account Categories
You can use G/L account categories to change the layout of your financial statements. After you set up your account categories on the G/L Account Categories page, and you choose the Generate Account Schedules action, the underlying account schedules for the core financial reports are updated. The next time you run one of these reports, such as the Balance Statement report, new totals and subentries are added, based on your changes.
Note
The top-level account categories, such as the Liabilities node are fixed and you cannot add your own. However, you can delete and add account categories at lower levels and change their structure to define how the related account schedule appears in reports.
It is recommended to create and structure your own lower-level G/L account categories from scratch, in a hierarchy if needed, rather than try to rearrange the existing ones. For example, you can restructure the Liabilities node to contain a new Equity node followed by the Current Liabilities and Long Term Liabilities nodes.
To create a new account schedule
You use account schedules to analyze figures in general ledger accounts or to compare general ledger entries with general ledger budget entries. For example, you can view the general ledger entries as percentages of the budget entries.
The account schedules in the standard version of Business Central are the basis of the standard financial reports, which may not suit the needs of your business. To quickly create your own financial reports, you can start by copying an existing account schedule. See step 3 below.
The Acc. Schedule Overview page is where you preview the financial report that the account schedule defines. In the following, it is important to understand that what you set up as account schedule rows and columns can only be seen and validated on the Acc. Schedule Overview page, which you open from an account schedule by choosing the Overview action. The Account Schedule page itself is only a setup area.
Choose the icon, enter Account Schedules, and then choose the related link.
On the Account Schedules page, choose the New action to create a new account schedule name.
Alternatively, choose the Copy Account Schedule action, fill in the two fields, and then choose the OK button.
Fill in the fields as necessary. In the Default Column Layout field select an existing layout. You can edit it later if you want.
You use column layouts to define columns for different parameters by which the financial data on the rows are shown. For example, you can design a column layout to compare net change and balance for the same period this year and last year, with four columns. For more information, see To edit a column layout.
Choose the Edit Account Schedule action.
Create a row for each financial element that you want to appear in the report, such as one row for current assets and another row for fixed assets. For inspiration, see existing account schedules in the CRONUS demonstration company.
Choose the Overview action to see the resulting financial report.
On the Acc. Schedule Overview page, in the Column Layout Name field, select another column layout to see the financial data by other parameters.
Choose the OK button.
You have now defined the basis of the account schedule, the rows of financial data to be displayed, and an existing layout of columns to show the data on the rows per different parameters. If the default column layout that you selected in step 4 does not suit your purpose, follow the next procedure.
To edit a column layout
You use column layouts to define what columns should be included in the resulting report. For example, you can design a layout to compare net change and balance for the same period this year and last year.
Note
A printed/previewed/saved version of an account schedule can display a maximum of five columns. If the account schedule is only meant for analysis on the Acc. Schedule Overview page, you can create as many columns as you want.
- On the Account Schedules page, select the relevant account schedule, and then choose the Edit Column Layout Setup action.
- On the Column Layouts page, create a row for each column by which financial data is shown in the financial report. Hover over a field to read a short description.
- Choose the OK button.
- Open the Acc. Schedule Overview page from time to time to verify that the new column layout works as intended.
Note
The columns that you define on each row represent columns 3 and up on the Acc. Schedule Overview page. The first two columns, Row No. and Description, are fixed.
To create a column that calculates percentages
Sometimes you may want to include a column in an account schedule to calculate percentages of a total. For example, if you have a number of rows that break down sales by dimension, you may want a column to indicate the percentage of total sales that each row represents.
- Choose the icon, enter Account Schedules, and then choose the related link.
- On the Account Schedule Names page, select an account schedule.
- Choose the Edit Account Schedule action to set up an account schedule row to calculate the total on which the percentages will be based.
- Insert a line immediately above the first row for which you want to display a percentage.
- Fill in the fields on the line as follows: In the Totaling Type field, enter Set Base for Percent. In the Totaling field, enter a formula for the total that the percentage will be based on. For example, if row 11 contains the total sales, enter 11.
- Choose the Edit Column Layout Setup action to set up a column.
- Fill in the fields on the line as follows: In the Column Type field, select Formula. In the Formula field, enter a formula for the amount that you want to calculate a percentage for, followed by %. For example, if column number N contains the net change, enter N%.
- Repeat steps 4 through 7 for each group of rows that you want to break down by percentage.
To set up account schedules with overviews
You can use an account schedule to create a statement comparing general ledger figures and general leger budget figures.
Choose the icon, enter Account Schedules, and then choose the related link.
On the Account Schedule Names page, select an account schedule.
Choose the Edit Account Schedule action
On the Account Schedule page, in the Name field, select the default account schedule name.
Choose the Insert Accounts action.
Select the accounts that you want to include in your statement, and then choose the OK button.
The accounts are now inserted into your account schedule. If you want you can also change the column layout.
Choose the Overview action.
On the Acc. Schedule Overview page, on the Dimension Filters FastTab, set the budget filter to the desired filter name.
Choose the OK button.
Now you can copy and paste your budget statement into a spreadsheet.
Comparing Accounting Periods using Period Formulas
Your account schedule can compare the results of different accounting periods, such as this month versus same month last year. To do that, open the Column Layout page, and personalize it by adding the Comparison Period Formula field as a column. For more information, see Personalize Your Workspace. You can then set that field to a period formula.
An accounting period does not have to match the calendar, but each fiscal year must have the same number of accounting periods, even though each period can be different in length.
Business Central uses the period formula to calculate the amount from the comparison period in relation to the period represented by the date filter on the report request. The comparison period is based on the period of the start date of the date filter. The abbreviations for period specifications are:
Abbreviation | Description |
---|---|
P | Period |
LP | Last period of a fiscal year, half-year, or quarter. |
CP | Current period of a fiscal year, half-year, or quarter. Use CP in formulas to set the period that starts or ends the formula. For example, FY[1..CP] denotes the time from the beginning of the current fiscal year to the current period. |
FY | Fiscal year. For example, FY[1..3] denotes first quarter of the current fiscal year |
Examples of formulas:
Formula | Description |
---|---|
<Blank> | Current period |
-1P | Previous period |
-1FY[1..LP] | Entire previous fiscal year |
-1FY | Current period in previous fiscal year |
-1FY[1..3] | First quarter of previous fiscal year |
-1FY[1..CP] | From the beginning of previous fiscal year to current period in previous fiscal year, including both periods |
-1FY[CP..LP] | From current period in previous fiscal year to last period of previous fiscal year, including both periods |
If you want to calculate by regular time periods, you must enter a formula in the Comparison Date Formula field instead. For example, if the field is set to -1Y, Business Central compares to the same period 1 year earlier.
Note
It is not always transparent which periods you are comparing because you can set a date filter on a report that spans different dates than the accounting periods that are reflected in the data in the chart of accounts. For example, you create an account schedule where you want to compare this period with the same period last year, so you set the Comparison Date Formula field to -1FY. Then, you run the report on February 28th and set the date filter to January and February. As a result, the account schedule compares January and February this year to January last year, which is the only completed accounting period of the two for last year.
For more information about date formulas, see Working with Calendar Dates and Times.
See Related Training at Microsoft Learn
See Also
Business Intelligence
Finance
Setting Up Finance
The General Ledger and the Chart of Accounts
Working with Business Central
Note
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