The financial reports turn the ledger into the statements you actually read: the trial balance, profit and loss, balance sheet, cash flow, and the detailed general ledger and subledgers, all live to the date you choose. They are not a separate set of books, just the postings, grouped and totalled.
- The core statements and what each answers
- How the accounting cycle produces them
- How drill-down and comparatives work
- The difference between a period report and a snapshot
The statements
- Trial Balance – every account with its debit or credit balance; the proof that the books balance.
- Profit and Loss – income less cost of sales and expenses over a period.
- Balance Sheet – assets, liabilities and equity at a single date.
- Cash Flow – the movement of cash over a period.
- General Ledger – every account with its underlying transactions.
- Subledger – receivables and payables detail, customer by customer and vendor by vendor.
How it behaves
Live and comparative
Every report is live to the date you pick and can be shown as a multi-year comparative, computed against the ledger as it stands rather than from a stored snapshot, so re-running one always reflects the latest postings. To move from a summary to the detail behind it, you turn to the dedicated detail reports: the General Ledger lists the postings account by account, and the Subledger breaks receivables and payables down customer by customer and vendor by vendor.
Period versus snapshot
Keep the two kinds of statement straight. The profit and loss and cash flow cover a period (a span of dates); the balance sheet and trial balance are a snapshot at a point in time. Asking for a balance sheet “for March” means its position on the last day of March.
Controls and export
The date range, filters and grouping are the shared report controls used across the product, and any report exports to a spreadsheet. The controls themselves are covered in Using reports.
Edge cases and good practice
- Summary then detail. If a total looks wrong, open the General Ledger or Subledger for that account or party; the postings behind the figure are there.
- Match the statement to the question. Performance over time is the profit and loss; position right now is the balance sheet.
Related
- How to: Read your financial statements
- Reference: Using reports (the controls)
- Reference: Chart of Accounts