How to Prepare a Balance Sheet (Step-by-Step) | Learn Edition
Accounting Fundamentals

How to Prepare a Balance Sheet, Step by Step

A balance sheet is the one financial statement every student, investor, accountant, and business owner needs to read fluently. This guide walks through what it is, how to build one from scratch, a fully worked example, real-world stories, diagrams, and a quiz to test what you've learned.

Students Investors Accountants Business Owners
THE FUNDAMENTAL ACCOUNTING EQUATION A = L + E ASSETS LIABILITIES EQUITY LEARNEDITION.COM
§1Definition

What Is a Balance Sheet?

A balance sheet (also called a statement of financial position) is a financial statement that reports what a business owns, what it owes, and what belongs to its owners, at one specific point in time. Unlike an income statement, which covers a period (a month, quarter, or year), a balance sheet is a snapshot — it answers "where does this business stand today?"

Every balance sheet is built on one unbreakable rule, known as the accounting equation:

Core Formula

Assets = Liabilities + Owner's Equity

In plain language: everything a company owns (assets) was paid for either by borrowing money (liabilities) or by the owners' own investment and retained profit (equity). The two sides must always be equal — that's why it's called a "balance" sheet.

This isn't a metaphor — it's a mathematical identity that holds true for every business on the planet, from a single-person freelance operation to a multinational corporation, regardless of currency, country, or accounting framework (GAAP or IFRS).

§2Visualizing the Equation

The Balance Sheet as a Balance Scale

Think of a balance sheet literally as a set of scales. Whatever sits on the "assets" side must be matched, in total dollar value, by what sits on the "liabilities + equity" side. If one side is heavier, an entry is missing or an error has been made somewhere in the books.

ASSETS Cash · Inventory Equipment · A/R LIABILITIES + EQUITY Loans · Owner Capital Must Always Balance

Fig. 1 — The Accounting Equation as a Balance Scale

§3The Three Building Blocks

Assets, Liabilities, and Equity — Defined

Before you can prepare a balance sheet, you need to be able to sort every account in a business into one of three buckets. Here's what each one means and what typically lives inside it.

Assets

What the business owns

Resources controlled by the business that have future economic value.

  • Current assets — convertible to cash within 12 months (cash, accounts receivable, inventory, prepaid expenses)
  • Non-current (fixed) assets — held longer than a year (equipment, buildings, land, vehicles, patents)
Liabilities

What the business owes

Obligations the business must eventually pay or settle.

  • Current liabilities — due within 12 months (accounts payable, short-term loans, accrued wages, taxes payable)
  • Non-current liabilities — due after 12 months (long-term loans, bonds payable, deferred tax)
Equity

What belongs to the owners

The residual claim owners have after all liabilities are subtracted from assets.

  • Owner's capital / share capital — money owners invested directly
  • Retained earnings — accumulated profits kept in the business rather than paid out
ASSETS (LEFT SIDE) Current Assets Cash, Receivables, Inventory Prepaid Expenses Non-Current Assets Equipment, Buildings, Land Intangibles, Long-Term Investments LIABILITIES + EQUITY (RIGHT SIDE) Current Liabilities Payables, Short-Term Loans, Accruals Non-Current Liabilities Long-Term Loans, Bonds Payable Owner's Equity Capital + Retained Earnings Total Left = Total Right

Fig. 2 — Balance Sheet Structure Map

§4The Process

8 Steps to Prepare a Balance Sheet

Because a balance sheet has to be built in a specific order — you can't total a section before you've listed what belongs in it — this really is a sequence. Follow these eight steps in order.

01

Choose your reporting date

Decide the exact date the balance sheet represents — commonly the last day of a month, quarter, or fiscal year (e.g., "As of December 31, 2025"). Everything you record must reflect the business's position on that single day.

02

Gather your trial balance and supporting records

Pull the trial balance from your accounting software or general ledger. Cross-check it against bank statements, loan statements, invoices, and depreciation schedules so every account balance is accurate before you start classifying anything.

03

List and classify your assets

Separate assets into current (cash, receivables, inventory, prepaid items) and non-current (equipment, property, long-term investments, intangibles). List current assets in order of liquidity, starting with cash.

04

List and classify your liabilities

Separate obligations into current (due within 12 months — payables, short-term debt, accrued expenses) and non-current (long-term loans, bonds, deferred taxes). List current liabilities in order of due date.

05

Calculate owner's equity

Add owner's or shareholders' capital contributions to retained earnings (accumulated profit minus any dividends or withdrawals). For a corporation, this section may also include common stock and additional paid-in capital.

06

Total each section

Add up total current assets + total non-current assets = total assets. Add total current liabilities + total non-current liabilities = total liabilities. Add capital + retained earnings = total equity.

07

Verify that the equation balances

Confirm that Total Assets = Total Liabilities + Total Equity. If the two sides don't match, retrace your entries — a missing transaction, a misclassified account, or a math error is almost always the cause.

08

Format, label, and review

Present the statement with a clear heading (company name, "Balance Sheet," and the "as of" date), consistent currency formatting, and a final review by a second person or your accountant before sharing it with stakeholders.

§5Worked Example

A Real-Time Example: Aurora Craft Coffee Co.

Aurora Craft Coffee Co. is a small independent coffee roastery. Here's how its bookkeeper applies the eight steps above to build a balance sheet as of December 31, 2025.

Assets
Current AssetsAmount ($)
Cash42,500
Accounts Receivable18,200
Inventory (green coffee, packaging)27,300
Prepaid Insurance3,000
Total Current Assets91,000
Non-Current Assets
Roasting Equipment (net)65,000
Furniture & Fixtures12,000
Total Non-Current Assets77,000
TOTAL ASSETS168,000
Liabilities & Equity
Current LiabilitiesAmount ($)
Accounts Payable14,500
Short-Term Loan10,000
Accrued Wages5,500
Total Current Liabilities30,000
Non-Current Liabilities
Long-Term Bank Loan48,000
Total Non-Current Liabilities48,000
Total Liabilities78,000
Owner's Equity
Owner's Capital70,000
Retained Earnings20,000
Total Equity90,000
TOTAL LIABILITIES + EQUITY168,000
✓ Balance Check: $168,000 (Assets) = $78,000 (Liabilities) + $90,000 (Equity)
Investor's Read

An investor scanning this sheet would note that current assets ($91,000) comfortably exceed current liabilities ($30,000) — a healthy short-term liquidity position — and that debt ($78,000) is smaller than equity ($90,000), suggesting the business isn't overly reliant on borrowed money.

§6Real Stories

Why the Balance Sheet Matters in the Real World

Cautionary Tale — Enron (2001)

Enron, once one of the largest energy companies in the United States, used off-balance-sheet special purpose entities to hide billions of dollars in debt and inflate reported financial health. When the true liabilities came to light, the company collapsed within weeks, wiping out shareholder value and thousands of jobs. The episode became one of the reasons regulators tightened disclosure rules for what must appear on a balance sheet.

Cautionary Tale — Lehman Brothers (2008)

Lehman Brothers used a short-term accounting maneuver, later nicknamed "Repo 105," to temporarily move liabilities off its balance sheet just before reporting dates, making its leverage look lower than it actually was. When the housing market collapsed and the true debt load became unavoidable, Lehman filed for bankruptcy in September 2008 — still the largest bankruptcy filing in U.S. history — triggering a global financial crisis.

Positive Example — Cash-Rich Balance Sheets

Some of the world's largest technology companies are well known in the investing world for holding enormous cash and short-term investment reserves on their balance sheets. This "fortress balance sheet" strategy lets a company weather recessions, fund acquisitions without borrowing, and reassure investors during uncertain markets — a strong illustration of why the right side and left side of the balance sheet tell a story about resilience, not just size.

The lesson for every audience is the same: a balance sheet is only useful if it's accurate and complete. Students learn the mechanics so the numbers are trustworthy; accountants build the controls that keep them trustworthy; investors read the results to judge risk; and business owners use them to make decisions about borrowing, hiring, and growth.

§7Common Pitfalls

Mistakes to Avoid When Preparing a Balance Sheet

Mixing up current and non-current classificationA loan due in 14 months but with the next 12 months' installments due sooner should be split between current and non-current portions.
Forgetting accrued expensesWages, interest, or taxes incurred but not yet paid still belong on the balance sheet as current liabilities.
Recording assets at original cost without depreciationFixed assets like equipment and vehicles should be shown net of accumulated depreciation, not their original purchase price.
Leaving out owner withdrawals or dividendsThese reduce retained earnings and must be reflected before the equity section is finalized.
Not reconciling with the income statementNet income from the income statement should flow into retained earnings — if it doesn't, the statements are out of sync.
Ignoring the "as of" date disciplineIncluding a transaction that happened one day after the reporting date (or omitting one that happened before it) throws off the entire snapshot.
§8Context

Balance Sheet vs. Income Statement vs. Cash Flow Statement

The balance sheet is one of three core financial statements. Here's how it relates to the other two:

StatementCoversAnswers
Balance SheetA single point in timeWhat does the business own, owe, and retain in equity right now?
Income StatementA period of time (month, quarter, year)Did the business make a profit or a loss over this period?
Cash Flow StatementA period of timeWhere did cash actually come from and go during this period?
§9Test Yourself

Balance Sheet Quiz — 10 Questions

Try to answer each question before checking the answer key at the bottom.

Q1

What does the accounting equation state?

  1. Assets = Revenue − Expenses
  2. Assets = Liabilities + Equity
  3. Liabilities = Assets + Equity
  4. Equity = Assets × Liabilities
Q2

Which of these is a current asset?

  1. Long-term bank loan
  2. Land
  3. Accounts receivable
  4. Owner's capital
Q3

A balance sheet reports a company's financial position:

  1. Over an entire year
  2. At a single point in time
  3. Only for the previous month
  4. Only for cash transactions
Q4

Which item belongs under liabilities?

  1. Inventory
  2. Accounts payable
  3. Retained earnings
  4. Cash
Q5

Retained earnings represent:

  1. Cash held in a savings account
  2. Profits kept in the business rather than distributed to owners
  3. Money borrowed from a bank
  4. The value of unsold inventory
Q6

If Total Assets = $200,000 and Total Liabilities = $120,000, what is Total Equity?

  1. $320,000
  2. $80,000
  3. $120,000
  4. $200,000
Q7

Which statement covers a period of time rather than a single date?

  1. Balance sheet
  2. Statement of financial position
  3. Income statement
  4. None of the above
Q8

A liability due in 18 months is classified as:

  1. Current liability
  2. Non-current liability
  3. Equity
  4. Asset
Q9

What accounting concept caused Lehman Brothers' balance sheet to understate its true leverage before its 2008 collapse?

  1. Overstating cash reserves
  2. Temporarily moving liabilities off the balance sheet
  3. Reporting too much equity
  4. Ignoring depreciation
Q10

Which of these best describes a "fortress balance sheet"?

  1. A balance sheet with heavy short-term debt
  2. A balance sheet with large cash reserves and low reliance on debt
  3. A balance sheet with no equity
  4. A balance sheet with only fixed assets
Reveal Answer Key
Q1 — B
Q2 — C
Q3 — B
Q4 — B
Q5 — B
Q6 — B ($80,000)
Q7 — C
Q8 — B
Q9 — B
Q10 — B
§10Frequently Asked Questions

FAQs on Preparing a Balance Sheet

What is the difference between a balance sheet and a trial balance?

A trial balance is an internal working document listing every account and its balance, used to check that debits equal credits before financial statements are prepared. A balance sheet is a formatted, external-facing financial statement built from that trial balance, showing only the asset, liability, and equity accounts, properly classified and totaled.

How often should a balance sheet be prepared?

Most businesses prepare one at least annually for tax and reporting purposes, but many also prepare monthly or quarterly balance sheets internally to track financial health, support loan applications, or brief investors and management.

Can a balance sheet ever fail to balance?

A correctly prepared balance sheet will always balance mathematically — if it doesn't, there's an error somewhere, such as a missing entry, duplicated transaction, or misclassified account, that needs to be traced and corrected before the statement can be finalized.

What's the difference between GAAP and IFRS balance sheets?

Both use the same underlying accounting equation, but they differ in formatting and some measurement rules. GAAP (used mainly in the United States) typically lists assets from most liquid to least liquid, while IFRS (used in most other countries) often lists them in the reverse order, from least to most liquid. Some valuation methods, such as for inventory or fixed assets, can also differ between the two frameworks.

Do individuals or freelancers need a balance sheet?

While not legally required for most sole proprietors or freelancers, a simple personal or business balance sheet listing what you own versus what you owe is a useful tool for tracking net worth, applying for credit, or preparing for a loan or investor conversation.

What is "working capital" and how does it relate to the balance sheet?

Working capital is calculated directly from the balance sheet as current assets minus current liabilities. It measures whether a business has enough short-term resources to cover its short-term obligations, and it's one of the first figures investors and lenders check.

How does depreciation affect the balance sheet?

Depreciation gradually reduces the book value of fixed assets like equipment or vehicles over their useful life. On the balance sheet, this appears as "accumulated depreciation," which is subtracted from the asset's original cost to show its net book value.

What software can help beginners prepare a balance sheet?

Most modern accounting software can generate a balance sheet automatically once transactions are recorded correctly. For learning purposes, many students and small business owners start by building one manually in a spreadsheet to understand exactly how each figure is derived before relying on automation.

Why do investors care so much about the balance sheet?

Investors use it to assess a company's liquidity (can it pay short-term bills?), solvency (can it meet long-term obligations?), and capital structure (how much of the business is financed by debt versus equity) — all of which influence risk and long-term return potential.

What happens if liabilities exceed assets?

When total liabilities exceed total assets, equity becomes negative — a situation often described as being "insolvent" on a balance sheet basis. This is a warning sign for lenders and investors, though it doesn't automatically mean the business will fail, especially if it still generates positive cash flow.

Learn Edition — Accounting Fundamentals Series · Educational content only, not financial or investment advice.
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