How To Record a Loan Payment

How do we record a loan payment correctly?

From my experience, a loan payment is often categorized incorrectly.

Once you understand it though, it is pretty simple. Unless you were able to borrow the money without interest (how nice!), you always want to make sure to categorize the interest portion to expense.

What if done wrong?

If done wrong, your balance sheet and P&L are incorrect! The loan payable balance is probably incorrect, and so is the profit on the P&L.

The interest expense is a deduction and reduces your taxes, so another reason we want to make sure it is done correctly.

Here is how you can categorize it correctly.

STEP
Identify the interest portion from the payment

You can obtain the amount from the statement or online.

STEP
Categorize the amount of interest paid to an interest expense account

If you use QuickBooks Online, you can split the payment in the bank feed.

STEP
Categorize the remaining amount to a loan payable account

If you have more than one loan, you want to make sure to categorize it to the account where this specific loan balance is recorded.

We want to reduce the loan payable balance only by the remaining amount of the payment (= principal) because when you receive a loan, you should have recorded the amount to the loan payment balance, which represents only the principal.

STEP
RECONCILE! Make sure the loan payable balance agrees to the loan balance in the statement.

It is a very easy step yet we don’t want to miss it. It is just a check to confirm you did it correctly.

If you are categorizing the loan payment using a journal entry:

ex) You paid $600, $100 interest with $500 principal

Dr. Interest expense $100
Dr. Loan payable $500
Cr. Cash $600

How to record it is the same regardless of who you borrowed money from. Even if you borrow money from your family and friends for the business, you make sure to record the interest paid to the interest expense account.

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Author

Hi! I'm Madoka Ono, CPA in Pleasanton CA (in San Francisco Bay Area).

I'm very fortunate to have the opportunity to help small business owners maximize the growth potential of their business by doing what I love. :)

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