In accounting, rectification of errors is one of the most important topics for Class 11, Class 12, B.Com, CA Foundation, CMA Foundation, CS Foundation students and practising accountants. Even the most careful book-keeper can make mistakes while recording transactions. If these errors are not corrected on time, they will affect the Trial Balance, Profit & Loss Account, and Balance Sheet.
This complete 2025 guide explains all types of errors, which errors affect trial balance, which do not, how to rectify them, and the role of Suspense Account with practical examples.
What is Rectification of Errors?
Rectification of errors means correcting the mistakes made during journalising, posting, balancing, or carrying forward in the books of accounts. The golden rule is: “Correct the error by passing a rectification journal entry following the double-entry principle.”
Classification of Errors in Accounting
Errors are broadly classified into two categories:
1. Errors Disclosed by Trial Balance (One-Sided Errors)
These errors affect only one side of the trial balance, so the trial balance will not tally. These are easy to locate.
| Type of Error | Example | Effect on Trial Balance |
|---|---|---|
| a) Error in casting (totalling) | Total of Purchase Book overcast by ₹1,000 | Debit > Credit by ₹1,000 |
| b) Error in posting (wrong side) | Sales ₹5,000 posted to debit side of Sales A/c | Debit excess ₹10,000 |
| c) Error in posting (wrong amount) | Rent paid ₹4,500 posted as ₹5,500 | Debit excess ₹1,000 |
| d) Omission of posting one side | Cash received from debtor ₹10,000 – only Cash A/c debited, debtor not credited | Debit excess ₹10,000 |
| e) Error in carrying forward | Balance of Sales A/c ₹1,50,000 carried forward as ₹1,05,000 | Credit short ₹45,000 |
2. Errors Not Disclosed by Trial Balance (Two-Sided Errors)
These errors affect both sides equally, so trial balance tallies even though books are wrong.
| Type of Error | Example |
|---|---|
| a) Error of Omission | Goods sold to Ramesh ₹20,000 completely omitted from books |
| b) Error of Commission | Goods sold to Anil ₹15,000 wrongly recorded as sale to Sunil ₹15,000 |
| c) Error of Principle | Machinery purchased ₹1,00,000 debited to Repairs A/c |
| d) Compensating Errors | Purchases overcast by ₹5,000 and Salaries also overcast by ₹5,000 |
| e) Error of Complete Reversal | Paid to creditor ₹8,000 → Creditor Dr. and Cash Cr. (wrong) → Correct: Cash Dr., Creditor Cr. |
Step-by-Step Rectification Process
- Identify the type of error
- Find out the correct double entry
- Pass the rectification journal entry
- If trial balance does not tally → open Suspense A/c temporarily
- When actual error is found → clear Suspense A/c
Role of Suspense Account
When the trial balance does not tally and the exact error is not immediately traceable, the difference is put into a temporary account called Suspense Account.
- If Debit > Credit → Suspense A/c is credited
- If Credit > Debit → Suspense A/c is debited
- Suspense A/c appears in trial balance until all errors are rectified
- Final goal: Suspense A/c balance must become zero
Rectification of Errors – Practical Examples (With Journal Entries)
Example 1: Error in Posting Amount (One-Sided Error)
Salary paid ₹18,500 was posted as ₹15,800 to Salary A/c.
Rectification Entry:
Salary A/c Dr. 2,700
To Suspense A/c 2,700
(Being short posting of salary rectified)Example 2: Error of Complete Reversal
Paid to Mohan ₹25,000 was recorded as: Mohan A/c Dr. 25,000 To Cash A/c 25,000 (Wrong)
Correct entry should be: Cash Dr., Mohan Cr.
Rectification Entry:
Cash A/c Dr. 50,000
To Mohan A/c 50,000
(Being reversal entry rectified – double the amount)Example 3: Error of Principle
Furniture purchased ₹80,000 debited to Purchases A/c.
Rectification Entry:
Furniture A/c Dr. 80,000
To Purchases A/c 80,000
(Being furniture wrongly debited to purchases now rectified)Effect: Cost of goods sold decreases → Gross Profit increases
Example 4: Error of Omission
Credit sale to Vijay ₹35,000 not recorded at all.
Rectification Entry:
Vijay A/c Dr. 35,000
To Sales A/c 35,000
(Being omitted credit sale now recorded)Example 5: Compensating Errors
Purchases overcast by ₹4,000 and Rent undercast by ₹4,000.
No rectification needed because they cancel each other, but for understanding:
Purchases A/c Dr. 4,000
To Rent A/c 4,000Example 6: Use of Suspense Account (Comprehensive Example)
Trial Balance of M/s Gupta Traders on 31st March 2025 did not tally. Total Debit = ₹8,95,000 Total Credit = ₹8,85,600 Difference = ₹9,400 (Debit excess)
Step 1: Put difference in Suspense A/c
Suspense A/c Dr. 9,400
To Difference in Trial Balance 9,400Later following errors were found:
- Sales Book undercast by ₹5,000
- Purchase of machinery ₹25,000 debited to Purchases A/c
- Credit purchase from Ravi ₹8,400 recorded as ₹4,800
Rectification Entries:
Suspense A/c Dr. 5,000
To Sales A/c 5,000Machinery A/c Dr. 25,000
To Purchases A/c 25,000Purchases A/c Dr. 3,600
To Ravi A/c 3,600
(8,400 – 4,800 = 3,600 short debited)Now Suspense A/c balance = 9,400 – 5,000 = ₹4,400 (Dr.) But after all rectification, Suspense A/c becomes zero → Trial Balance tallies.
Summary Table: Types of Errors and Their Rectification
| Type of Error | Affects Trial Balance? | Rectified By | Suspense A/c Needed? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Error in casting | Yes | Rectification entry | Yes (temporary) |
| Wrong side posting | Yes | Reversal + correct | Yes |
| Error of omission | No | Recording omitted entry | No |
| Error of principle | No | Transfer to correct head | No |
| Compensating errors | No | Individual rectification | No |
| Complete reversal | No | Double the amount entry | No |
Pro Tips for Students & Professionals (2025)
- Always start rectification from the date of original error
- Use “Being… now rectified” narration in exams
- Suspense A/c is only a temporary arrangement
- In Tally Prime / Busy / MargERP → Go to Gateway of Tally → Display → Exception Reports → Rectify easily
- For GST audit, rectification of errors is compulsory before filing GSTR-9
Conclusion
Mastering rectification of errors and suspense account is crucial for preparing accurate financial statements. Even a single unrectified error can change the entire profit figure and mislead stakeholders.
Practice at least 20–30 rectification entries daily, and you will score full marks in this chapter in any exam – CBSE, ISC, CA Foundation, or university level.

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