Trial Balance
Definition
List of every general-ledger account with its debit or credit balance at a point in time. Bridge between day-to-day bookkeeping and audit-ready financial statements; the auditor's first request before fieldwork.
Attributes
| Type | Financial statement |
|---|---|
| Applicable law | IFRS |
| Jurisdiction | UAE |
| Reports to | Audit Report |
| Accounting standard | IFRS |
| Purpose | Financial reporting |
| Statement type | Balance sheet |
What it is
The Trial Balance is a listing of every general-ledger account with its debit or credit balance at a point in time. It is the bridge between day-to-day bookkeeping (transactions in the GL) and the formal Financial Statements (Balance Sheet + P&L). A balanced trial balance — where total debits equal total credits — is the precondition for any meaningful financial-statement preparation.
Auditors ask for the Trial Balance as document #1 of their audit fieldwork. Tax preparers use it to compute taxable income and VAT. A clean Trial Balance accelerates everything downstream.
Key characteristics
- Format
- Account list with debit / credit columns
- Rule
- Total debits = total credits
- Position
- Bridge from bookkeeping to financial statements
- Frequency
- Generated monthly at minimum
How it works
- **Gather General Ledger Data:** Collect all debit and credit balances from each general ledger account.
- **Sum Debits and Credits:** Calculate the total of all debit balances and the total of all credit balances.
- **Verify Equality:** Ensure that the total debits equal the total credits. If they don't, there's an error in the accounting system that needs to be investigated.
- **Prepare the Trial Balance:** Organize the account balances in a structured format, typically by account type (assets, liabilities, equity, revenue, expenses).
Types of Trial Balance
| Type | Description | When it applies |
|---|---|---|
| Audit Trial Balance | Specifically prepared for audit purposes, often with additional disclosures. | Required for external audits in the UAE. |
| Management Trial Balance | Prepared internally for management review and decision-making. | Used for internal financial analysis and reporting. |
Examples
A UAE-based e-commerce company would prepare a trial balance to ensure the accuracy of its sales, purchases, and inventory records. A company operating within a free zone like DMCC would need a trial balance as part of its statutory audit requirements. A real estate developer in Dubai would use a trial balance to reconcile its accounts related to property sales, construction costs, and financing. Companies registered under the UAE mainland LLC structure are required to maintain accurate trial balances for regulatory compliance.
Why it matters
If the Trial Balance is messy, every audit and tax filing is messy. The cheapest audit is the one that starts from a clean Trial Balance — fieldwork goes from weeks to days.
Common misconceptions
Misconception
The trial balance is the final financial statement.
Reality
The trial balance is a supporting document for financial statements, not the final statement itself.
FAQs
- What does it mean if my Trial Balance doesn't balance?
- It means there's a bookkeeping error — typically a one-sided journal entry, a wrong account classification, or a posting mistake. The error must be found and corrected before the Balance Sheet and P&L can be prepared. Most accounting software flags imbalances at posting time.















