Working with General Journals
Most financial transactions are posted to the general ledger through dedicated business documents, such as purchase invoices and sales orders. But you can also process business activities such as purchasing, paying, using recurring journals to post accruals, or refunding employee expenses by posting journal lines in the various journals in Business Central.
Most journals are based on the General Journal, and you can process all transactions on the General Journal page. For more information, see Post Transactions Directly to the General Ledger.
For example, you can use post employees' expenditure of own money on business-related expenses, for later reimbursement. For more information, see Record and Reimburse Employees' Expenses.
But in many cases, you will want to use the journals that are optimized for specific types of transactions, such as the Payment Journal for registering payments. For more information, see Record Payments and Refunds in the Payment Journal.
You use general journals to post financial transactions directly to general ledger accounts and other accounts, such as bank, customer, vendor, and employee accounts. Posting with a general journal always creates entries on general ledger accounts. This is true even when, for example, you post a journal line to a customer account, because an entry is posted to a general ledger receivables account through a posting group.
The information that you enter in a journal is temporary and can be changed while it is in the journal. When you post the journal, the information is transferred to entries on individual accounts, where it cannot be changed. You can, however, unapply posted entries, and you can post reversing or correcting entries. For more information, see Reverse Journal Postings and Undo Receipts/Shipments.
Note
The general journal only shows a limited number of fields on the journal line by default. If you want to see additional fields, such as the Account Type field, choose the Show More Columns action. To hide the additional fields again, choose the Show Fewer Columns action. When you see fewer columns, then the same posting date is used for all lines. If you want to have multiple posting dates for the same journal entry, choose the Show More Columns action.
Using Journal Templates and Batches
There are several general journal templates. Each journal template is represented by a dedicated page with particular functions and the fields that are required to support those functions, such as the Payment Reconciliation Journal page to process bank payments and the Payment Journal page to pay your vendors or reimburse your employees. For more information, see Make Payments and Reconcile Customer Payments with the Cash Receipt Journal or from Customer Ledger Entries.
For each journal template, you can set up your own personal journal as a journal batch. For example, you can define your own journal batch for the payment journal that has your personal layout and settings. The following tip is an example of how to personalize a journal.
Tip
If you select the Suggest Balancing Amount check box on the line for your batch on the General Journal Batches page, then the Amount field on, for example, general journal lines for the same document number is automatically prefilled with the value that is required to balance the document. For more information, see Letting Business Central Suggest Values.
Tip
To add or remove fields in journals, use the Personalizing banner. For more information, see Personalize Your Workspace.
Validating General Journal Batches
To help prevent delays when posting, you can turn on a background check that will notify you when there is a mistake in the financial journal you're working on that will prevent you from posting the journal. On the General Journal Batch page, you can choose Background Error Check to have Business Central validate finance journals, such as general or payment journals, while you're working on them.
When you enable the validation the Journal Check FactBox displays next to the journal lines and will show issues in the current line and the whole batch. Validation happens when you load a finance journal batch, and when you choose another journal line. The Issues total tile in the FactBox shows the total number of issues that Business Central found, and you can choose it to open an overview the issues.
You can use the Show Lines with Issues and Show All Lines actions to toggle between journal lines that have or don't have issues. The new Journal Line Details FactBox provides quick overview and access to data from journal lines, such as the G/L account, customer, or vendor, as well as to the posting setup for specific accounts.
Reversing Journals to Correct Mistakes
When working with journals that have many lines and something goes wrong, it's important to have an easy way to correct mistakes. The Posted General Journal page offers a couple of actions that can help.
- Copy Selected Lines to Journal - Copy only the lines that you select.
- Copy G/L Register to Journal - Copy all lines that belong to the same G/L register.
These actions let you create a copy of a general journal line or a batch, and then specify the following:
- The journal to copy the lines to
- Whether with opposite signs (a reversing journal)
- A different posting date or document number
To allow journals to be copied to posted general journals, on the General Journal Templates page, choose the Copy to Posted Jnl. Lines check box. After you allow people to copy posted general journals, if needed you can turn off copying for specific batches.
Understanding Main Accounts and Balancing Accounts
If you have set up default balancing accounts for the journal batches on the General Journals page, the balancing account will be filled in automatically when you fill in the Account No. field. Otherwise, fill in both the Account No. field and the Bal. Account No. field manually. A positive amount in the Amount field is debited to the main account and credited to the balancing account. A negative amount is credited to the main account and debited to the balancing account.
Note
VAT is calculated separately for the main account and the balancing account, so they can use different VAT percentage rates.
Working with Recurring Journals
A recurring journal is a general journal with specific fields for managing transactions that you post frequently with few or no changes, such as rent, subscriptions, electricity, and heat. Using these fields for recurring transactions, you can post both fixed and variable amounts. You can also specify automatic reversal entries for the day after the posting date. You can also use allocation keys to divide the recurring entries among various accounts. For more information, see Allocating Recurring Journal Amounts to Several Accounts.
With a recurring journal, entries that will be posted regularly need to be typed in only once. That is, the accounts, dimensions and dimension values and so on that you enter will be remain in the journal after posting. If any adjustments are necessary, you can make them with each posting.
Recurring Method field
This field determines how the amount on the journal line is treated after posting. For example, if you will use the same amount every time you post the line, you can let the amount remain. If you will use the same accounts and text on the line but the amount will vary every time you post, you can choose to delete the amount after posting.
To | See |
---|---|
F Fixed | The amount on the journal line will remain after posting. |
V Variable | The amount on the journal line will be deleted after posting. |
B Balance | The posted amount on the account on the line will be allocated among the accounts specified for the line in the Gen. Jnl. Allocation table. The balance on the account will thus be set to zero. Remember to fill in the Allocation % field on the Allocations page. For more information, see Allocating Recurring Journal Amounts to Several Accounts. |
RF Reversing Fixed | The amount on the journal line will remain after posting, and a balancing entry will be posted on the next day. |
RV Reversing Variable | The amount on the journal line will be deleted after posting, and a balancing entry will be posted on the next day. |
RB Reversing Balance | The posted amount on the account on the line will be allocated among the accounts specified for the line on the Allocations page. The balance on the account will be set to zero, and a balancing entry is posted on the next day. |
BD Balance by Dimension | The journal line allocates costs based on a G/L account's balance by dimension. You'll be prompted to set the dimension filters to be used to calculate the source G/L account's balance by dimension from which you want to allocate costs. Alternatively, choose the Set Dimension Filters action later. |
RBD Reversing Balance by Dimension | The journal line allocates costs based on a G/L account's reversing balance by dimension. You'll be prompted to set the dimension filters to be used to calculate the source G/L account's balance by dimension from which you want to allocate costs. Alternatively, choose the Set Dimension Filters action later. |
Note
The VAT fields can be filled in on either the recurring journal line or on the allocation journal line but not on both. That is, they can be filled in on the Allocations page only if the corresponding lines in the recurring journal are not filled in.
Recurring Frequency field
This field determines how often the entry on the journal line will be posted. It is a date formula field, and it must be filled in for recurring journal lines. For more information, see Using Date Formulas.
Examples
If the journal line must be posted every month, enter "1M". After every posting, the date in the Posting Date field will be updated to the same date in the next month.
If you want to post an entry on the last day of every month, you can do one of the following:
Post the first entry on the last day of a month by entering 1D+1M-1D (1 day + 1 month - 1 day). With this formula, the posting date is calculated correctly regardless of how many days there are in the month.
Post the first entry on any arbitrary day of a month by entering 1M+CM. With this formula, the posting date will be after one full month + the remaining days of the current month.
Expiration Date field
This field determines the date on which the line will be posted for the last time. The line will not be posted after this date.
The advantage of using the field is that the line will not be deleted from the journal immediately and you can always replace the present expiration date with a later one so that you can use the line further into the future.
If the field is blank, the line will be posted every time you post until it is deleted from the journal.
Allocating Recurring Journal Amounts to Several Accounts
On the Recurring General Journal page, you can choose the Allocations action to see or manage how amounts on the recurring journal line are allocated to several accounts and dimensions. Note that an allocation functions as balancing account line to the recurring journal line.
Just as in a recurring journal, you need to enter an allocation only once. The allocation will remain in the allocation journal after posting, so you do not need to enter amounts and allocations every time you post the recurring journal line.
If the recurring method in the recurring journal is set to Balance or Reversing Balance, then any dimension value codes in the recurring journal are disregarded when the account is set to zero. So if you allocate a recurring line to various dimension values on the Allocations page, then only one reversing entry will be created. Therefore, if you allocate a recurring journal line that contains a dimension value code, then you must not enter the same code on the Allocations page. If you do, the dimension values will be incorrect.
To allocate recurring journal amounts based on dimensions, set the Recurring Method field to Balance by Dimension or Reversing Balance by Dimension instead. If the recurring method in the recurring journal is set to Balance by Dimension or Reversing Balance by Dimension, then any dimension value codes in the recurring journal are considered when the account is set to zero. So if you allocate a recurring line to various dimension values on the Allocations page, then a number of reversing entries that matches the number of dimension value combinations that the balance is comprised of, are created. If you allocate account balance through the recurring journal that contains a dimension value code, remember to use Balance by Dimension or Reversing Balance by Dimension to make sure that the dimension values are correctly balanced or reversed from the source account.
For example, your company has a couple of business units and a handful of departments that your controllers have set up as dimensions. To speed up the purchase invoice entry process, you decide to require the accounts payable clerks to enter only business unit dimensions. Since each business unit has specific allocation keys for the Department dimension, such as based on the number of employees, you can use the BD Balance by Dimension or RBD Reversing Balance by Dimension recurring methods to re-allocate expenses for each business unit to the right departments based on the allocation keys.
Note
Dimensions that you set on allocation lines are not automatically calculated, and you must specify which dimension values must be set on the allocation accounts. In case you want to preserve the link between the source account dimension and the allocation account dimension, we recommend that you use the Cost Accounting capabilities instead.
Example: Allocating Rent Payments to Different Departments
You pay rent every month, so you have entered the rent amount on the cash account on a recurring journal line. On the Allocations page, you can divide the expense among several departments (Department dimension) according to the number of square feet that each one occupies. The calculation is based on the allocation percentage on each line. You can enter various accounts on different allocation lines (if rent will also be divided among several accounts), or you can enter the same account but with various dimension value codes for the Department dimension on each line.
Reversal Date Calculation
When using recurring general journals to post accruals at the end of a period, it's important to have full control over reversal entries. On the Recurring General Journals page, the Reversal Date Calculation field lets you control the date that reversal entries will be posted when reversal recurring methods are used.
Example
Accruals are usually posted with Fixed, Variable, or Balance recurring methods on the journal line. The posting date of the posted amount on the account on journal line is calculated using the recurring frequency. The posting date for the balancing entry is calculated using the Reversal Date Calculation field, as follows:
- If the field is blank, the balancing entry will be posted the next day.
- If the field contains a date formula (for example, 5D for five days), the balancing entry will be posted with a posting date calculated using the reversal date calculation.
Note
By default, the Reversal Date Calculation field is not available on the Recurring General Journals page. To use the field, you must add it by personalizing the page. For more information, see Personalize Your Workspace.
Working with Standard Journals
When you have created journal lines which you know you are likely to create again later, you can save them as a standard journal before you post the journal. This functionality applies to item journals and general journals.
Note
The following procedure refers to the item journal, but the information also applies to the general journal.
To save a standard journal
Choose the icon, enter Item Journals, and then choose the related link.
Enter one or more journal lines.
Select the journal lines that you want to reuse.
Choose the Save as Standard Journal action.
In the Save as Standard Item Journal request page, define a new or existing standard item journal that the lines should be saved in.
If you have already created one or more standard item journals and you want to replace one of these with the new set of item journal lines, in the Code field, select the code you want.
Choose the OK button to verify that you want to overwrite the existing standard item journal and replace all its content.
Select the Save Unit Amount field if you want to save the values in the Unit Amount field of the standard item journal.
Select the Save Quantity field if you want application to save the values in the Quantity field.
Choose the OK button to save the standard item journal.
When you have finished saving the standard item journal, the Item Journal page is displayed so you can proceed to post it, knowing that it can easily be recreated next time you need to post the same or similar lines.
To reuse a standard journal
Choose the icon, enter Item Journals, and then choose the related link.
Choose the Get Standard Journals action.
The Standard Item Journals page opens showing codes and descriptions for all existing standard item journals.
To review a standard item journal before you select it for reuse, choose the Show Journal action.
Any changes you make in a standard item journal are implemented right away. They will be there next time you open or reuse the standard item journal in question. You should therefore be sure that the change is important enough to apply generally. Otherwise, make the specific change in the item journal after the standard item journal lines have been inserted. See step 4 below.
On the Standard Item Journals page, select the standard item journal you want to reuse, and then choose the OK button.
Now the item journal is filled with the lines you saved as the standard item journal. If journal lines already existed in the item journal, the inserted lines will be placed under the existing journal lines.
If you did not check the Save Unit Amount field when you used the Save as Standard Item Journal function job, then the Unit Amount field on lines that are inserted from the standard journal is automatically filled with the item's current value, copied from the Unit Cost field on the item card.
Note
If you selected the Save Unit Amount or Save Quantity fields, you should now make sure the inserted values are correct for this particular inventory adjustment before you post the item journal.
If the inserted item journal lines contain saved unit amounts that you do not want to post, you can quickly adjust it to the current value of the item as follows.
Select the item journal lines you want to adjust, and then choose the Recalculate Unit Amount action. This will update the Unit Amount field with the current unit cost of the item.
Choose the post action.
To renumber document numbers in journals
To make sure that you do not receive posting errors because of the document number order, you can use the Renumber Document Numbers function before you post a journal.
In all journals that are based on the general journal, the Document No. field is editable so that you can specify different document numbers for different journal lines or the same document number for related journal lines.
If the No. Series field on the journal batch is filled, then the posting function in general journals requires that the document number on individual or grouped journal lines be in sequential order. To make sure that you do not receive posting errors because of the document number order, you can use the Renumber Document Numbers function before you post the journal. If related journal lines were grouped by document number before you used the function, they will remain grouped but may be assigned a different document number.
This function also works on filtered views.
Any renumbering of document numbers will respect related applications, such as a payment application that has been made from the document on the journal line to a vendor account. Accordingly, the Applies-to ID and Applies-to Doc. No. fields on the affected ledger entries may be updated.
The following procedure is based on the General Journal page, but applies to all other journals that are based on the general journal, such as the Payment Journal page.
- Choose the icon, enter General Journals, and then choose the related link.
- When you are ready to post the journal, choose the Renumber Document Numbers action.
Values in the Document No. field are changed, where required, so that the document number on individual or grouped journal lines are in sequential order. After documents are renumbered, you can proceed to post the journal.
See Related Training at Microsoft Learn
See Also
Post Transactions Directly to the General Ledger
Reverse Journal Postings and Undo Receipts/Shipments
Allocate Costs and Income
Finance
Working with Business Central
Close Open Item Ledger Entries Resulting from Fixed Application in the Item Journal
Revalue Inventory in the Revaluation Journal
Count, Adjust, and Reclassify Inventory Using Journals
Reconcile Customer Payments with the Cash Receipt Journal or from Customer Ledger Entries
Reconcile Vendor Payments with the Payment Journal or from Vendor Ledger Entries
Work with Intercompany Documents and Journals
Note
Can you tell us about your documentation language preferences? Take a short survey.
The survey will take about seven minutes. No personal data is collected (privacy statement).