Debit and Credit Made Easy: The Beginner’s Guide That Finally Makes Accounting Click (Part 2)

Debit and Credit Explained: The Simple Guide That Finally Makes Accounting Make Sense (Part 2)

Parts 2–6: A practical beginner-friendly guide to Assets, Liabilities, Equity, Revenue, Expenses, real-world examples, common mistakes, memory shortcuts, and practice exercises.

Part 2: Assets, Liabilities, and Equity

In Part 1, we learned the foundation:

Debit means left. Credit means right.

Now we need to learn something more powerful:

Whether debit increases or decreases an account depends on the type of account.

This is where accounting begins to make sense.

The Accounting Equation Again

Assets = Liabilities + Equity

This equation has two sides:

Left Side Right Side
Assets Liabilities + Equity

Now connect this to debit and credit:

  • Assets live naturally on the debit side.
  • Liabilities and Equity live naturally on the credit side.

This is why assets increase with debits, while liabilities and equity increase with credits.

1. Assets: Things the Business Owns

An asset is something the business owns or controls that has value.

Examples include:

  • Cash
  • Bank balance
  • Inventory
  • Equipment
  • Furniture
  • Vehicles
  • Buildings
  • Amounts customers owe the business

Assets increase with debits and decrease with credits.

Asset Account Increase Decrease
Cash Debit Credit
Inventory Debit Credit
Equipment Debit Credit

Example: The Business Receives Cash

You put $10,000 into your business.

Cash is an asset. Cash increased. Assets increase with debits.

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

Cash increased, so Cash is debited.

2. Liabilities: Things the Business Owes

A liability is an obligation. It is something the business must pay, settle, or deliver in the future.

Examples include:

  • Bank loans
  • Amounts owed to suppliers
  • Credit card balances
  • Taxes payable
  • Wages payable
  • Rent payable

Liabilities increase with credits and decrease with debits.

Example: The Business Borrows Money

Your business borrows $20,000 from a bank.

Two things happen:

  • Cash increases.
  • Loan payable increases.
Debit Credit
Cash $20,000 Bank Loan Payable $20,000

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

Loan Payable is a liability, and it increased, so Loan Payable is credited.

3. Equity: The Owner’s Share of the Business

Equity represents the owner’s claim on the business after liabilities are deducted from assets.

In simple language:

Equity is what belongs to the owner after debts are paid.

Examples include:

  • Owner capital
  • Share capital
  • Retained earnings
  • Accumulated profits

Equity increases with credits and decreases with debits.

Example: Owner Invests Cash

The owner contributes $5,000 into the business.

Two things happen:

  • Cash increases.
  • Owner Capital increases.
Debit Credit
Cash $5,000 Owner Capital $5,000

The Big Part 2 Rule

Account Type Increase With Decrease With
Assets Debit Credit
Liabilities Credit Debit
Equity Credit Debit

Part 3: Revenue and Expenses

Now we add two account types that every beginner must understand:

  • Revenue
  • Expenses

Revenue and expenses are connected to Equity because they affect the owner’s wealth.

Revenue: Money Earned by the Business

Revenue is income earned from selling goods or providing services.

Examples include:

  • Sales revenue
  • Service income
  • Consulting fees
  • Rental income
  • Interest income

Revenue increases profit. Profit increases equity. Since equity increases with credits, revenue also increases with credits.

Revenue increases with credits and decreases with debits.

Example: Cash Sale

Your business sells goods for $800 cash.

Two things happen:

  • Cash increases.
  • Revenue increases.
Debit Credit
Cash $800 Sales Revenue $800

Cash is an asset and increased, so Cash is debited.

Revenue increased, so Revenue is credited.

Expenses: Costs Incurred to Run the Business

Expenses are costs the business incurs to earn revenue and operate.

Examples include:

  • Rent expense
  • Salary expense
  • Electricity expense
  • Internet expense
  • Advertising expense
  • Fuel expense
  • Insurance expense

Expenses reduce profit. Lower profit reduces equity. Since equity decreases with debits, expenses increase with debits.

Expenses increase with debits and decrease with credits.

Example: Paying Rent

Your business pays $1,200 rent in cash.

Two things happen:

  • Rent Expense increases.
  • Cash decreases.
Debit Credit
Rent Expense $1,200 Cash $1,200

The Five Account Types

Account Type Normal Increase Side
Assets Debit
Expenses Debit
Liabilities Credit
Equity Credit
Revenue Credit

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

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

The best way to understand debit and credit is to see many ordinary transactions. Each example follows the same method:

  1. Identify the accounts affected.
  2. Identify whether each account increases or decreases.
  3. Apply the debit and credit rule.
No. Transaction Debit Credit
1 Owner invests $10,000 cash Cash $10,000 Owner Capital $10,000
2 Business borrows $25,000 from bank Cash $25,000 Bank Loan Payable $25,000
3 Buy equipment for $3,000 cash Equipment $3,000 Cash $3,000
4 Buy inventory for $2,000 cash Inventory $2,000 Cash $2,000
5 Buy inventory on credit for $4,000 Inventory $4,000 Accounts Payable $4,000
6 Pay supplier $1,500 Accounts Payable $1,500 Cash $1,500
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 Pay rent $1,000 Rent Expense $1,000 Cash $1,000
11 Pay salaries $2,500 Salary Expense $2,500 Cash $2,500
12 Pay electricity bill $300 Utilities Expense $300 Cash $300
13 Receive service income $700 cash Cash $700 Service Revenue $700
14 Pay advertising $450 Advertising Expense $450 Cash $450
15 Buy vehicle for $15,000 cash Vehicle $15,000 Cash $15,000
16 Buy vehicle using loan $15,000 Vehicle $15,000 Vehicle Loan Payable $15,000
17 Pay loan principal $2,000 Loan Payable $2,000 Cash $2,000
18 Pay interest $200 Interest Expense $200 Cash $200
19 Owner withdraws $1,000 Owner Drawings $1,000 Cash $1,000
20 Receive interest income $100 Cash $100 Interest Income $100
21 Pay insurance $600 Insurance Expense $600 Cash $600
22 Pay internet bill $120 Internet Expense $120 Cash $120
23 Buy office supplies $250 Office Supplies $250 Cash $250
24 Use supplies worth $80 Supplies Expense $80 Office Supplies $80
25 Receive deposit from customer $500 Cash $500 Unearned Revenue $500
26 Earn the customer deposit Unearned Revenue $500 Service Revenue $500
27 Receive bill for repairs $350, unpaid Repair Expense $350 Accounts Payable $350
28 Pay repair bill later Accounts Payable $350 Cash $350
29 Owner adds equipment worth $2,000 Equipment $2,000 Owner Capital $2,000
30 Bank charges monthly fee $25 Bank Charges Expense $25 Cash $25
31 Sell old equipment for $1,000 cash Cash $1,000 Equipment $1,000
32 Pay tax bill $700 Tax Payable $700 Cash $700

Part 5: Common Mistakes and Memory Shortcuts

Mistake 1: Thinking Debit Always Means Increase

This is the most common beginner mistake. Debit increases assets and expenses, but debit decreases liabilities, equity, and revenue.

Mistake 2: Thinking Credit Always Means Decrease

Credit decreases assets and expenses, but credit increases liabilities, equity, and revenue.

Mistake 3: Learning From Bank Statements First

Bank statements are confusing because they show the bank’s perspective, not your business’s perspective.

Mistake 4: Forgetting That Every Transaction Has Two Sides

If you only record what increased, your accounting will not balance. Always ask what else changed.

Mistake 5: Confusing Assets and Expenses

Buying a computer is usually an asset. Paying electricity is usually an expense. An asset gives future benefit. An expense is consumed to operate the business.

The Memory Shortcut: DEALER

DEALER

Debit Side Credit Side
Dividends or Drawings Liabilities
Expenses Equity
Assets Revenue

The left side of DEALER helps you remember what normally increases with debits: Drawings, Expenses, Assets.

The right side helps you remember what normally increases with credits: Liabilities, Equity, Revenue.

The Three-Question Method

  1. What accounts changed?
  2. Did each account increase or decrease?
  3. What type of account is each one?

This method works for almost every beginner-level transaction.

Part 6: Exercises and Mastery

Now test your understanding. Try answering each exercise before looking at the answer.

Exercise Set A: Identify the Debit and Credit

No. Transaction Answer
1 Owner invests $8,000 cash Debit Cash, Credit Owner Capital
2 Pay office rent $900 Debit Rent Expense, Credit Cash
3 Sell services for $1,400 cash Debit Cash, Credit Service Revenue
4 Buy supplies on credit $300 Debit Supplies, Credit Accounts Payable
5 Pay supplier $300 Debit Accounts Payable, Credit Cash
6 Borrow $12,000 from bank Debit Cash, Credit Loan Payable
7 Pay salary $2,000 Debit Salary Expense, Credit Cash
8 Customer pays amount owed $600 Debit Cash, Credit Accounts Receivable

Exercise Set B: Explain Why

Question: A business pays $500 for advertising. Why is Advertising Expense debited?

Answer: Advertising Expense is an expense account. Expenses increase with debits. Cash decreases, so Cash is credited.

Question: A business receives $1,000 cash from a customer for services. Why is Service Revenue credited?

Answer: Service Revenue is a revenue account. Revenue increases with credits. Cash is an asset and increased, so Cash is debited.

Question: A business buys inventory on credit. Why is Accounts Payable credited?

Answer: Accounts Payable is a liability. The business now owes more to a supplier. Liabilities increase with credits.

The Final Mastery Checklist

  • You know debit means left.
  • You know credit means right.
  • You know assets increase with debits.
  • You know expenses increase with debits.
  • You know liabilities increase with credits.
  • You know equity increases with credits.
  • You know revenue increases with credits.
  • You know every transaction affects at least two accounts.
  • You know debits must equal credits.

The One-Sentence Summary

Debit and credit are the left and right sides of accounting used to record both effects of every business transaction so the accounting equation stays balanced.

Once you understand that, accounting becomes far less frightening.

You no longer need to guess whether something is a debit or a credit.

You simply ask:

  1. What changed?
  2. Did it increase or decrease?
  3. What type of account is it?

That is how beginners become confident. That is how professionals think. And that is how debit and credit finally begin to make sense.

In Part 3., we will focus on how revenue and expenses work in debit and credit accounting.

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