Overview of the Payroll Accounting Process
The following discussion shows the beginning-to-end processing of payroll. Though some systems that incorporate more or less automation may not include all of these steps, the general process flow will apply to most payroll systems:
- Set up new employees. Have new employees fill out payroll-specific information as part of the hiring process, such as the W-4 form and medical insurance forms that may require payroll deductions. Set aside copies of this information in order to include it in the next payroll.
- Collect timecard information. Salaried employees require no change in wages paid for each payroll, but you must collect and summarize information about the hours worked by non-exempt employees. This may involve having employees scan a badge through a computerized time clock.
- Verify timecard information. Summarize the payroll information just collected and have supervisors verify that employees have correctly recorded their time.
- Summarize wages due. Multiply the number of hours worked by the pay rate for each employee, also factoring in any overtime or shift differentials.
- Enter employee changes. Employees may ask to have changes made to their paychecks, usually to the number of tax exemptions or pension withholdings. You may need to record much of this prior to calculating taxes, since it impacts the amount of wages to which taxes are applied.
- Calculate taxes. Use IRS tax tables to determine the amount of taxes to be withheld from employee gross wages.
- Calculate wage deductions. There may be a number of additional deductions to take away from employee net income, including deductions for medical insurance, life insurance, garnishments, and union dues. You must also track the goal amounts for these deductions, so that you stop deducting once the goal totals are reached.
- Deduct manual payments. If manual payments have already been made to employees, such as advances, then deduct these amounts from the remaining net pay.
- Create a payroll register. Summarize the wage and deduction information for each employee in a payroll register, which you can then summarize to also create a journal entry to record the payroll. This document is automatically created by all payroll software packages.
- Print paychecks. Print employee paychecks using the information in the payroll register. You normally itemize gross wages, deductions, and net pay in a remittance advice that accompanies the paycheck.
- Pay by direct deposit. Notify your direct deposit processor of the amount of any direct deposit payments, and issue remittance advices to employees for these payments.
- Issue paychecks. Have a paymaster issue paychecks to employees, requiring employee identification if there are a large number of employees.
- Deposit withheld taxes. Deposit all withheld payroll taxes and employer matched taxes at a bank that is authorized to handle these transactions.
Payroll Journal Entries
The primary journal entry for payroll is the summary-level entry that is compiled from the payroll register, and which is recorded in either the payroll journal or the general ledger. This entry usually includes debits for the direct labor expense, salaries, and the company's portion of payroll taxes. There will also be credits to a number of accounts, each one detailing the liability for payroll taxes that have not been paid, as well as for the amount of cash already paid to employees for their net pay. The basic entry (assuming no further breakdown of debits by individual department) is:
Debit | Credit | |
Direct labor expense | xxx | |
Salaries expense | xxx | |
Payroll taxes expense | xxx | |
Cash | xxx | |
Federal withholding taxes payable | xxx | |
Social security taxes payable | xxx | |
Medicare taxes payable | xxx | |
Federal unemployment taxes payable | xxx | |
State withholding taxes payable | xxx | |
State unemployment taxes payable | xxx | |
Garnishments payable | xxx |
When you later pay the withheld taxes and company portion of payroll taxes to the IRS, you then use the following entry to reduce the balance in the cash account, and eliminate the balances in the liability accounts:
Debit | Credit | |
Cash | xxx | |
Federal withholding taxes payable | xxx | |
Social security taxes payable | xxx | |
Medicare taxes payable | xxx | |
Federal unemployment taxes payable | xxx | |
State withholding taxes payable | xxx | |
State unemployment taxes payable | xxx | |
Garnishments payable | xxx |
It is quite common to have some amount of unpaid wages at the end of an accounting period, so you should accrue this expense (if it is material). The accrual entry, as shown next, is simpler than the comprehensive payroll entry already shown, because you typically clump all payroll taxes into a single expense account and offsetting liability account. After recording this entry, you reverse it at the beginning of the following accounting period, and then record the actual payroll expense whenever it occurs.
Debit | Credit | |
Direct labor expense | xxx | |
Salaries expense | xxx | |
Accrued salaries and wages | xxx | |
Accrued payroll taxes | xxx |
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