Debit and Credit Explained: 30+ Real-World Examples (Part 4)

Debit and Credit Explained: 30+ Real-World Examples (Part 4)

A practical example-based guide that shows how debit and credit work in ordinary business transactions.

Why Examples Matter More Than Memorization

Debit and credit become easier when you stop treating them as abstract accounting words and start seeing them inside ordinary business activities.

In Part 1, we learned that debit means left and credit means right.

In Part 2, we learned how Assets, Liabilities, and Equity behave.

In Part 3, we learned how Revenue and Expenses fit into the system.

Now we need repetition.

That is because debit and credit are learned the same way people learn driving, cooking, typing, or using accounting software. You do not become confident by reading one definition. You become confident by seeing the same logic applied repeatedly in different situations.

The more examples you see, the less mysterious debit and credit become.

Every example in this section follows the same simple four-step method:

  1. What accounts changed?
  2. Did each account increase or decrease?
  3. What type of account is each one?
  4. Which side records the increase or decrease?

Once you can answer those four steps, you can solve most beginner-level debit and credit transactions.

The Rule Table to Keep Beside You

Before we look at the examples, keep this table in mind.

Account Type Increases With Decreases With
Assets Debit Credit
Expenses Debit Credit
Liabilities Credit Debit
Equity Credit Debit
Revenue Credit Debit

Assets and Expenses increase with debits. Liabilities, Equity, and Revenue increase with credits.

Example 1: Owner Invests Cash Into the Business

The owner invests $10,000 cash into the business.

Two things happen:

  • Cash increases.
  • Owner Capital increases.

Cash is an asset. Assets increase with debits.

Owner Capital is equity. Equity increases with credits.

Debit Credit
Cash $10,000 Owner Capital $10,000

Example 2: Business Borrows Money From the Bank

The business borrows $25,000 from a bank.

Two things happen:

  • Cash increases.
  • Bank Loan Payable increases.

Cash is an asset, so the increase is recorded as a debit.

Bank Loan Payable is a liability, so the increase is recorded as a credit.

Debit Credit
Cash $25,000 Bank Loan Payable $25,000

Important lesson: Borrowing money increases cash, but it also increases debt. More cash does not always mean the business is richer.

Example 3: Buying Equipment With Cash

The business buys equipment for $3,000 cash.

Two things happen:

  • Equipment increases.
  • Cash decreases.

Equipment is an asset, and it increased, so Equipment is debited.

Cash is also an asset, but it decreased, so Cash is credited.

Debit Credit
Equipment $3,000 Cash $3,000

This transaction does not immediately create an expense. The business has exchanged one asset, Cash, for another asset, Equipment.

Example 4: Buying Inventory With Cash

The business buys inventory for $2,000 cash.

Two things happen:

  • Inventory increases.
  • Cash decreases.
Debit Credit
Inventory $2,000 Cash $2,000

Inventory is an asset because it can be sold in the future. Cash is also an asset. One asset increases while another asset decreases.

Example 5: Buying Inventory on Credit

The business buys inventory for $4,000 but does not pay immediately.

Two things happen:

  • Inventory increases.
  • Accounts Payable increases.

Inventory is an asset. Assets increase with debits.

Accounts Payable is a liability. Liabilities increase with credits.

Debit Credit
Inventory $4,000 Accounts Payable $4,000

Important lesson: A business can acquire assets even when no cash is paid immediately.

Example 6: Paying a Supplier

The business pays $1,500 to a supplier for an amount previously owed.

Two things happen:

  • Accounts Payable decreases.
  • Cash decreases.

Accounts Payable is a liability. Liabilities decrease with debits.

Cash is an asset. Assets decrease with credits.

Debit Credit
Accounts Payable $1,500 Cash $1,500

This entry reduces the amount owed to the supplier and reduces the business’s cash.

Examples 7–16: Sales, Revenue, and Customer Payments

No. Transaction Debit Credit
7 Cash sale of $900 Cash $900 Sales Revenue $900
8 Credit sale of $1,200 Accounts Receivable $1,200 Sales Revenue $1,200
9 Customer pays $1,200 owed Cash $1,200 Accounts Receivable $1,200
10 Receive service income $700 cash Cash $700 Service Revenue $700
11 Invoice customer for $2,000 service work Accounts Receivable $2,000 Service Revenue $2,000
12 Customer pays $2,000 invoice Cash $2,000 Accounts Receivable $2,000
13 Receive customer deposit $500 before work is done Cash $500 Unearned Revenue $500
14 Earn the customer deposit later Unearned Revenue $500 Service Revenue $500
15 Receive interest income $100 Cash $100 Interest Income $100
16 Refund customer $150 for returned goods Sales Returns $150 Cash $150

Notice the pattern: when revenue increases, it is usually credited. When cash or receivables increase, they are debited.

Examples 17–26: Expenses and Payments

No. Transaction Debit Credit
17 Pay rent $1,000 Rent Expense $1,000 Cash $1,000
18 Pay salaries $2,500 Salary Expense $2,500 Cash $2,500
19 Pay electricity bill $300 Utilities Expense $300 Cash $300
20 Pay advertising $450 Advertising Expense $450 Cash $450
21 Pay insurance $600 Insurance Expense $600 Cash $600
22 Pay internet bill $120 Internet Expense $120 Cash $120
23 Receive repair bill $350, unpaid Repair Expense $350 Accounts Payable $350
24 Pay repair bill later Accounts Payable $350 Cash $350
25 Bank charges monthly fee $25 Bank Charges Expense $25 Cash $25
26 Pay tax bill already recorded $700 Tax Payable $700 Cash $700

Notice the pattern: expenses usually increase with debits. Cash decreases with credits. If the expense is not paid immediately, a liability is credited instead.

Examples 27–36: Loans, Assets, Owner Transactions, and Adjustments

No. Transaction Debit Credit
27 Buy vehicle for $15,000 cash Vehicle $15,000 Cash $15,000
28 Buy vehicle using loan $15,000 Vehicle $15,000 Vehicle Loan Payable $15,000
29 Pay loan principal $2,000 Loan Payable $2,000 Cash $2,000
30 Pay loan interest $200 Interest Expense $200 Cash $200
31 Owner withdraws $1,000 Owner Drawings $1,000 Cash $1,000
32 Owner adds equipment worth $2,000 Equipment $2,000 Owner Capital $2,000
33 Buy office supplies $250 Office Supplies $250 Cash $250
34 Use supplies worth $80 Supplies Expense $80 Office Supplies $80
35 Sell old equipment for $1,000 cash, assuming its carrying amount is $1,000 Cash $1,000 Equipment $1,000
36 Record depreciation expense $500 Depreciation Expense $500 Accumulated Depreciation $500

Notice the pattern: not every cash payment is an expense. Buying a vehicle or equipment creates an asset. Paying interest creates an expense. Paying loan principal reduces a liability.

Five Examples Explained Slowly

Slow Example 1: Paying Rent

The business pays $1,000 rent.

Apply the four-step method:

  1. What changed? Rent Expense and Cash.
  2. Did they increase or decrease? Rent Expense increased. Cash decreased.
  3. What type of accounts are they? Rent Expense is an expense. Cash is an asset.
  4. Which side records the change? Expenses increase with debits. Assets decrease with credits.
Debit Credit
Rent Expense $1,000 Cash $1,000

Slow Example 2: Customer Pays Later

The business sells services for $2,000 but the customer will pay next month.

Apply the four-step method:

  1. What changed? Accounts Receivable and Service Revenue.
  2. Did they increase or decrease? Both increased.
  3. What type of accounts are they? Accounts Receivable is an asset. Service Revenue is revenue.
  4. Which side records the change? Assets increase with debits. Revenue increases with credits.
Debit Credit
Accounts Receivable $2,000 Service Revenue $2,000

Slow Example 3: Paying a Supplier (Refers to Transaction #6)

The business pays $600 previously owed to a supplier.

Apply the four-step method:

  1. What changed? Accounts Payable and Cash.
  2. Did they increase or decrease? Accounts Payable decreased. Cash decreased.
  3. What type of accounts are they? Accounts Payable is a liability. Cash is an asset.
  4. Which side records the change? Liabilities decrease with debits. Assets decrease with credits.
Debit Credit
Accounts Payable $600 Cash $600

Slow Example 4: Customer Deposit Received Before Work Is Done

A customer pays $500 in advance, but the business has not yet provided the service.

Apply the four-step method:

  1. What changed? Cash and Unearned Revenue.
  2. Did they increase or decrease? Both increased.
  3. What type of accounts are they? Cash is an asset. Unearned Revenue is a liability.
  4. Which side records the change? Assets increase with debits. Liabilities increase with credits.

Why is Unearned Revenue a liability? Because the business now owes the customer either the service or a refund.

Debit Credit
Cash $500 Unearned Revenue $500

Slow Example 5: The Deposit Is Later Earned

The business completes the service related to the $500 customer deposit.

Apply the four-step method:

  1. What changed? Unearned Revenue and Service Revenue.
  2. Did they increase or decrease? Unearned Revenue decreased. Service Revenue increased.
  3. What type of accounts are they? Unearned Revenue is a liability. Service Revenue is revenue.
  4. Which side records the change? Liabilities decrease with debits. Revenue increases with credits.
Debit Credit
Unearned Revenue $500 Service Revenue $500

Notice that no cash changes hands in this second entry. Cash was already received earlier. This entry simply changes the accounting meaning of the earlier deposit.

What Part 4 Really Shows

After seeing many examples, the pattern becomes clearer.

Debit and credit are not random. They follow account behavior.

The question is never “Is this a debit or credit?” The real question is “What type of account changed, and did it increase or decrease?”

If you can identify the account type, the debit or credit side becomes much easier.

In Part 5, we will focus on the common mistakes beginners make and the memory shortcuts that help debit and credit become automatic.

Scroll to Top