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Journal Entry Prep

Prepare journal entries with proper debits, credits, and supporting documentation for month-end close. Use when booking accruals, prepaid amortization, fixed asset depreciation, payroll entries, revenue recognition, or any manual journal entry.

$ npx promptcreek add journal-entry-prep

Auto-detects your installed agents and installs the skill to each one.

What This Skill Does

This skill provides best practices, standard entry types, documentation requirements, and review workflows for journal entry preparation. It assists accounting teams in preparing accurate and compliant journal entries. It is designed to improve the quality and consistency of journal entries.

When to Use

  • Preparing accruals for accounts payable.
  • Booking fixed asset depreciation.
  • Amortizing prepaid expenses.
  • Recording payroll entries.
  • Adjusting revenue recognition.
  • Ensuring proper documentation for journal entries.

Key Features

Covers standard accrual types and their entries.
Provides guidance on accounts payable accruals.
Explains fixed asset depreciation methods.
Details prepaid expense amortization.
Offers best practices for journal entry preparation.
Highlights documentation requirements.

Installation

Run in your project directory:
$ npx promptcreek add journal-entry-prep

Auto-detects your installed agents (Claude Code, Cursor, Codex, etc.) and installs the skill to each one.

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Journal Entry Preparation

Important: This skill assists with journal entry workflows but does not provide financial advice. All entries should be reviewed by qualified financial professionals before posting.

Best practices, standard entry types, documentation requirements, and review workflows for journal entry preparation.

Standard Accrual Types and Their Entries

Accounts Payable Accruals

Accrue for goods or services received but not yet invoiced at period end.

Typical entry:

  • Debit: Expense account (or capitalize if asset-qualifying)
  • Credit: Accrued liabilities

Sources for calculation:

  • Open purchase orders with confirmed receipts
  • Contracts with services rendered but unbilled
  • Recurring vendor arrangements (utilities, subscriptions, professional services)
  • Employee expense reports submitted but not yet processed

Key considerations:

  • Reverse in the following period (auto-reversal recommended)
  • Use consistent estimation methodology period over period
  • Document basis for estimates (PO amount, contract terms, historical run-rate)
  • Track actual vs accrual to refine future estimates

Fixed Asset Depreciation

Book periodic depreciation expense for tangible and intangible assets.

Typical entry:

  • Debit: Depreciation/amortization expense (by department or cost center)
  • Credit: Accumulated depreciation/amortization

Depreciation methods:

  • Straight-line: (Cost - Salvage) / Useful life — most common for financial reporting
  • Declining balance: Accelerated method applying fixed rate to net book value
  • Units of production: Based on actual usage or output vs total expected

Key considerations:

  • Run depreciation from the fixed asset register or schedule
  • Verify new additions are set up with correct useful life and method
  • Check for disposals or impairments requiring write-off
  • Ensure consistency between book and tax depreciation tracking

Prepaid Expense Amortization

Amortize prepaid expenses over their benefit period.

Typical entry:

  • Debit: Expense account (insurance, software, rent, etc.)
  • Credit: Prepaid expense

Common prepaid categories:

  • Insurance premiums (typically 12-month policies)
  • Software licenses and subscriptions
  • Prepaid rent (if applicable under lease terms)
  • Prepaid maintenance contracts
  • Conference and event deposits

Key considerations:

  • Maintain an amortization schedule with start/end dates and monthly amounts
  • Review for any prepaid items that should be fully expensed (immaterial amounts)
  • Check for cancelled or terminated contracts requiring accelerated amortization
  • Verify new prepaids are added to the schedule promptly

Payroll Accruals

Accrue compensation and related costs for the period.

Typical entries:

Salary accrual (for pay periods not aligned with month-end):

  • Debit: Salary expense (by department)
  • Credit: Accrued payroll

Bonus accrual:

  • Debit: Bonus expense (by department)
  • Credit: Accrued bonus

Benefits accrual:

  • Debit: Benefits expense
  • Credit: Accrued benefits

Payroll tax accrual:

  • Debit: Payroll tax expense
  • Credit: Accrued payroll taxes

Key considerations:

  • Calculate salary accrual based on working days in the period vs pay period
  • Bonus accruals should reflect plan terms (target amounts, performance metrics, payout timing)
  • Include employer-side taxes and benefits (FICA, FUTA, health, 401k match)
  • Track PTO/vacation accrual liability if required by policy or jurisdiction

Revenue Recognition

Recognize revenue based on performance obligations and delivery.

Typical entries:

Recognize previously deferred revenue:

  • Debit: Deferred revenue
  • Credit: Revenue

Recognize revenue with new receivable:

  • Debit: Accounts receivable
  • Credit: Revenue

Defer revenue received in advance:

  • Debit: Cash / Accounts receivable
  • Credit: Deferred revenue

Key considerations:

  • Follow ASC 606 five-step framework for contracts with customers
  • Identify distinct performance obligations in each contract
  • Determine transaction price (including variable consideration)
  • Allocate transaction price to performance obligations
  • Recognize revenue as/when performance obligations are satisfied
  • Maintain contract-level detail for audit support

Supporting Documentation Requirements

Every journal entry should have:

  • Entry description/memo: Clear, specific description of what the entry records and why
  • Calculation support: How amounts were derived (formula, schedule, source data reference)
  • Source documents: Reference to the underlying transactions or events (PO numbers, invoice numbers, contract references, payroll register)
  • Period: The accounting period the entry applies to
  • Preparer identification: Who prepared the entry and when
  • Approval: Evidence of review and approval per the authorization matrix
  • Reversal indicator: Whether the entry auto-reverses and the reversal date

Review and Approval Workflows

Typical Approval Matrix

| Entry Type | Amount Threshold | Approver |

|-----------|-----------------|----------|

| Standard recurring | Any amount | Accounting manager |

| Non-recurring / manual | < $50K | Accounting manager |

| Non-recurring / manual | $50K - $250K | Controller |

| Non-recurring / manual | > $250K | CFO / VP Finance |

| Top-side / consolidation | Any amount | Controller or above |

| Out-of-period adjustments | Any amount | Controller or above |

Note: Thresholds should be set based on your organization's materiality and risk tolerance.

Review Checklist

Before approving a journal entry, the reviewer should verify:

  • [ ] Debits equal credits (entry is balanced)
  • [ ] Correct accounting period (not posting to a closed period)
  • [ ] Account codes exist and are appropriate for the transaction
  • [ ] Amounts are mathematically accurate and supported by calculations
  • [ ] Description is clear, specific, and sufficient for audit purposes
  • [ ] Department/cost center/project coding is correct
  • [ ] Treatment is consistent with prior periods and accounting policies
  • [ ] Auto-reversal is set appropriately (accruals should reverse)
  • [ ] Supporting documentation is complete and referenced
  • [ ] Entry amount is within the preparer's authority level
  • [ ] No duplicate of an existing entry
  • [ ] Unusual or large amounts are explained and justified

Common Errors to Check For

  • Unbalanced entries: Debits do not equal credits (system should prevent, but check manual entries)
  • Wrong period: Entry posted to an incorrect or already-closed period
  • Wrong sign: Debit entered as credit or vice versa
  • Duplicate entries: Same transaction recorded twice (check for duplicates before posting)
  • Wrong account: Entry posted to incorrect GL account (especially similar account codes)
  • Missing reversal: Accrual entry not set to auto-reverse, causing double-counting
  • Stale accruals: Recurring accruals not updated for changed circumstances
  • Round-number estimates: Suspiciously round amounts that may not reflect actual calculations
  • Incorrect FX rates: Foreign currency entries using wrong exchange rate or date
  • Missing intercompany elimination: Entries between entities without corresponding elimination
  • Capitalization errors: Expenses that should be capitalized, or capitalized items that should be expensed
  • Cut-off errors: Transactions recorded in the wrong period based on delivery or service date
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Supported Agents

Claude CodeCursorCodexGemini CLIAiderWindsurfOpenClaw

Details

License
MIT
Source
admin
Published
3/18/2026

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