Drawing Account

Drawing Account

A drawing account is an accounting record maintained to track money withdrawn from a business by its owners. Drawing accounts work year-to-year: An account is closed out at the end of each year, with the balance transferred to the owner's equity account, and then re-established in the new year. A drawing account is a contra account to the owner’s equity. A drawing account acts as a contra account to the business owner's equity; an entry that debits the drawing account will have an offsetting credit to the cash account in the same amount. A journal entry closing the drawing account of a sole proprietorship includes a debit to the owner’s capital account and a credit to the drawing account. The journal entry closing the drawing account requires a credit to Eve’s drawing account for $24,000 and a debit of $24,000 to her capital account.

A drawing account is a ledger that tracks money withdrawn from a business, usually a sole proprietorship or partnership, by its owner(s).

What Is a Drawing Account?

A drawing account is an accounting record maintained to track money withdrawn from a business by its owners. A drawing account is used primarily for businesses that are taxed as sole proprietorships or partnerships. Owner withdrawals from businesses that are taxed as separate entities must generally be accounted for as either compensation or dividends.

A drawing account is a ledger that tracks money withdrawn from a business, usually a sole proprietorship or partnership, by its owner(s).
A drawing account acts as a contra account to the business owner's equity; an entry that debits the drawing account will have an offsetting credit to the cash account in the same amount.
Drawing accounts work year-to-year: An account is closed out at the end of each year, with the balance transferred to the owner's equity account, and then re-established in the new year.

How a Drawing Account Works

A drawing account is a contra account to the owner’s equity. The drawing account’s debit balance is contrary to the expected credit balance of an owner's equity account because owner withdrawals represent a reduction of the owner's equity in a business. In keeping with double-entry bookkeeping, every journal entry requires both a debit and a credit. Because a cash withdrawal requires a credit to the cash account, an entry that debits the drawing account will have an offsetting credit to the cash account for the same amount.

Since the drawing account tracks distributions to owners in a given year, it must be closed out at the end of the year with a credit (representing the total withdrawn) and the balance is transferred to the main owner’s equity account with a debit. The drawing account is then re-opened and used again the following year for tracking distributions. Because taxes on withdrawals are paid by the individual partners, there is no tax impact to the business associated with the withdrawn funds.

Important

Since the drawing account is not an expense, it does not show up on the income statement of the business.

Creating a schedule from the drawing account shows the details for and a summary of distributions made to each business partner. The appropriate final distributions may be made at year-end, ensuring each partner receives the correct share of the company’s earnings, according to the partnership agreement.

Recording Transactions in the Drawing Account

A journal entry to the drawing account consists of a debit to the drawing account and a credit to the cash account. A journal entry closing the drawing account of a sole proprietorship includes a debit to the owner’s capital account and a credit to the drawing account.

For example, at the end of an accounting year, Eve Smith’s drawing account has accumulated a debit balance of $24,000. Eve withdrew $2,000 per month for personal use, recording each transaction as a debit to her drawing account and a credit to her cash account. The journal entry closing the drawing account requires a credit to Eve’s drawing account for $24,000 and a debit of $24,000 to her capital account.

Related terms:

Closing Entry

A closing entry is a journal entry made at the end of the accounting period whereby data are moved from temporary accounts to permanent accounts. read more

Contra Liability Account

A contra liability account is a liability account that is debited in order to offset a credit to another liability account. read more

Contra Account

A contra account is an account used in a general ledger to reduce the value of a related account. A contra account's natural balance is the opposite of the associated account. read more

Dangling Debit

A dangling debit is a debit entry with no offsetting credit entry that occurs when a company purchases goodwill or services to create a debit. read more

Dividend

A dividend is the distribution of some of a company's earnings to a class of its shareholders, as determined by the company's board of directors. read more

Double Entry

Double entry is an accounting term stating that every financial transaction has equal and opposite effects in at least two different accounts. read more

Earnings

A company's earnings are its after-tax net income, meaning its profits. Earnings are the main determinant of a public company's share price. read more

Journal

A journal is a detailed account that records all the financial transactions of a business to be used for future reconciling of official accounting records. read more

Partnership

A partnership in business is a formal agreement made by two or more parties to jointly manage and operate a company. read more

Petty Cash

Petty cash is a small amount of cash on hand used for paying expenses too small to merit writing a check. Learn how to balance petty cash in accounting.  read more