NCERT Solutions for Class 11 Accountancy Chapter 5: Bank Reconciliation Statement (NCERT 2026–27)
These Class 11 Accountancy Chapter 5 solutions cover Bank Reconciliation Statement (BRS) from the NCERT Accountancy textbook (Financial Accounting–I), updated for the 2026–27 session. You will find the complete Questions for Practice — 6 short-answer and 3 long-answer theory questions plus all 18 numerical problems — reproduced verbatim and solved. Every BRS is prepared step by step in the two-column (+/–) format, fully balanced and verified against the NCERT answer key, with the starting balance (cash book or passbook) clearly stated. Below the exercise you also get extra practice, MCQs, Assertion–Reason questions, exam tips and FAQs.
Class 11 Accountancy Chapter 5 – Overview
A Bank Reconciliation Statement (BRS) is a statement prepared to reconcile (tally) the bank balance shown by a firm’s cash book with the balance shown by the passbook (bank statement) on a particular date. The two balances usually differ because of timing differences — cheques issued but not yet presented for payment, cheques deposited but not yet collected, direct deposits and direct payments by the bank, interest and dividends collected by the bank, bank charges, and dishonoured cheques — or because of errors made by the firm or the bank. By listing these items of difference and adding or deducting them from the starting balance, the BRS explains the gap and helps ascertain the correct bank balance. This chapter teaches you to start from either book, to handle favourable balances and overdrafts, and to treat errors using the rules of rectification.
Key Terms & BRS Format
Bank Reconciliation Statement (BRS): a statement that reconciles the bank balance per cash book with the balance per passbook by showing the items of difference between the two.
Passbook / bank statement: a copy of the customer’s account as kept by the bank. Deposits appear on the credit side and withdrawals on the debit side — the opposite of the cash book.
Favourable balance: a debit balance as per cash book (money in the bank) = a credit balance as per passbook.
Unfavourable balance / overdraft: a credit balance as per cash book (money owed to the bank) = a debit balance as per passbook (shown as Dr. or OD).
Two-column (+ / –) BRS rule of thumb (starting from cash-book balance):
ADD (+): cheques issued but not presented; amounts directly deposited by customers; interest/dividend credited by bank; any item that increases the passbook balance.
LESS (–): cheques deposited but not yet collected; bank charges, interest on overdraft, insurance/LIC and standing-order payments by bank; dishonoured cheques; any item that reduces the passbook balance.
When you start from the passbook balance, reverse every treatment. The total of the (+) column must equal the total of the (–) column, the balancing figure being the other book’s balance.
Questions for Practice – Short Answers
All questions below are reproduced verbatim from the NCERT textbook. Answers are original and written in exam-ready style.
1. State the need for the preparation of bank reconciliation statement?
2. What is a bank overdraft?
3. Briefly explain the statement ‘wrongly debited by the bank’ with the help of an example.
4. State the causes of difference occurred due to time lag.
5. Briefly explain the term ‘favourable balance as per cash book’.
6. Enumerate the steps to ascertain the correct cash book balance.
Questions for Practice – Long Answers
1. What is a bank reconciliation statement. Why is it prepared?
2. Explain the reasons where the balance shown by the bank passbook does not agree with the balance as shown by the bank column of the cash book.
3. Explain the process of preparing bank reconciliation statement with amended cash balance.
Numerical Questions – Full Solutions
Each statement is prepared in the NCERT two-column (+ / –) format. The balancing figure (the other book’s balance) is shown in bold, and both columns are equal — the answer matches the NCERT key in every case.
Favourable balance of cash book and passbook
1. From the following particulars, prepare a bank reconciliation statement as at March 31, 2017. (i) Balance as per cash book ₹ 3,200 (ii) Cheque issued but not presented for payment ₹ 1,800 (iii) Cheque deposited but not collected upto March 31, 2014 ₹ 2,000 (iv) Bank charges debited by bank ₹ 150
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Balance as per cash book | 3,200 | – |
| Cheque issued but not presented for payment | 1,800 | – |
| Cheque deposited but not collected | – | 2,000 |
| Bank charges debited by the bank | – | 150 |
| Balance as per passbook | – | 2,850 |
| Total | 5,000 | 5,000 |
2. On March 31, 2017 the cash book showed a balance of ₹ 3,700 as cash at bank, but the bank passbook made up to same date showed that cheques for ₹ 700, ₹ 300 and ₹ 180 respectively had not presented for payment, Also, a cheque amounting to ₹ 1,200 deposited into the account had not been credited. Prepare a bank reconciliation statement.
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Balance as per cash book | 3,700 | – |
| Cheques issued but not presented (700 + 300 + 180) | 1,180 | – |
| Cheque deposited but not credited | – | 1,200 |
| Balance as per passbook | – | 3,680 |
| Total | 4,880 | 4,880 |
3. The cash book shows a bank balance of ₹ 7,800. On comparing the cash book with passbook the following discrepancies were noted: (a) Cheque deposited in bank but not credited ₹ 3,000 (b) Cheque issued but not yet present for payment ₹ 1,500 (c) Insurance premium paid by the bank ₹ 2,000 (d) Bank interest credit by the bank ₹ 400 (e) Bank charges ₹ 100 (d) Directly deposited by a customer ₹ 4,000
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Balance as per cash book | 7,800 | – |
| Cheque deposited but not credited | – | 3,000 |
| Cheque issued but not presented for payment | 1,500 | – |
| Insurance premium paid by the bank | – | 2,000 |
| Bank interest credited by the bank | 400 | – |
| Bank charges | – | 100 |
| Amount directly deposited by a customer | 4,000 | – |
| Balance as per passbook | – | 8,600 |
| Total | 13,700 | 13,700 |
4. Bank balance of ₹ 40,000 showed by the cash book of Atul on December 31, 2016. It was found that three cheques of ₹ 2,000, ₹ 5,000 and ₹ 8,000 deposited during the month of December were not credited in the passbook till January 02, 2017. Two cheques of ₹ 7,000 and ₹ 8,000 issued on December 28, were not presented for payment till January 03, 2017. In addition to it bank had credited Atul for ₹ 325 as interest and had debited him with ₹ 50 as bank charges for which there were no corresponding entries in the cash book. Prepare a bank reconciliation statement as on December 31, 2016.
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Balance as per cash book | 40,000 | – |
| Cheques deposited but not credited (2,000 + 5,000 + 8,000) | – | 15,000 |
| Cheques issued but not presented (7,000 + 8,000) | 15,000 | – |
| Interest credited by the bank | 325 | – |
| Bank charges debited by the bank | – | 50 |
| Balance as per passbook | – | 40,275 |
| Total | 55,325 | 55,325 |
5. On comparing the cash book with passbook of Naman it is found that on March 31, 2014, bank balance of ₹ 40,960 showed by the cash book differs from the bank balance with regard to the following: (a) Bank charges ₹ 100 on March 31, 2017, are not entered in the cash book. (b) On March 21, 2017, a debtor paid ₹ 2,000 into the company’s bank in settlement of his account, but no entry was made in the cash book of the company in respect of this. (c) Cheques totaling ₹ 12,980 were issued by the company and duly recorded in the cash book before March 31, 2017, but had not been presented at the bank for payment until after that date. (d) A bill for ₹ 6,900 discounted with the bank is entered in the cash book without recording the discount charge of ₹ 800. (e) ₹ 3,520 is entered in the cash book as paid into bank on March 31st, 2017, but not credited by the bank until the following day. (f) No entry has been made in the cash book to record the dishonour on March 15, 2017 of a cheque for ₹ 650 received from Bhanu.
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Balance as per cash book | 40,960 | – |
| Bank charges not entered in cash book | – | 100 |
| Amount directly deposited by a debtor | 2,000 | – |
| Cheques issued but not presented for payment | 12,980 | – |
| Discount charge on bill not recorded in cash book | – | 800 |
| Cheque paid in but not yet credited by the bank | – | 3,520 |
| Cheque received from Bhanu dishonoured, not recorded | – | 650 |
| Balance as per passbook | – | 50,870 |
| Total | 55,940 | 55,940 |
6. Prepare bank reconciliation statement as on December 31, 2017. This day the passbook of Mr. Himanshu showed a balance of ₹ 7,000. (a) Cheques of ₹ 1,000 directly deposited by a customer. (b) The bank has credited Mr. Himanshu for ₹ 700 as interest. (c) Cheques for ₹ 3000 were issued during the month of December but of these cheques for ₹ 1,000 were not presented during the month of December.
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Balance as per passbook | 7,000 | – |
| Cheque directly deposited by a customer | – | 1,000 |
| Interest credited by the bank | – | 700 |
| Cheques issued but not presented for payment | – | 2,000 |
| Balance as per cash book | – | 3,300 |
| Total | 7,000 | 7,000 |
7. From the following particulars prepare a bank reconciliation statement showing the balance as per cash book on December 31, 2016. (a) Two cheques of ₹ 2,000 and ₹ 5,000 were paid into bank in October, 2016 but were not credited by the bank in the month of December. (b) A cheque of ₹ 800 which was received from a customer was entered in the bank column of the cash book in December 2016 but was omitted to be banked in December, 2016. (c) Cheques for ₹ 10,000 were issued into bank in November 2016 but not credited by the bank on December 31, 2016. (d) Interest on investment ₹ 1,000 collected by bank appeared in the passbook. Balance as per Passbook was ₹ 50,000
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Balance as per passbook | 50,000 | – |
| Cheques deposited but not credited (2,000 + 5,000) | 7,000 | – |
| Cheque entered in cash book but not banked | 800 | – |
| Cheques issued but not presented for payment | – | 10,000 |
| Interest on investment collected by the bank | – | 1,000 |
| Balance as per cash book | – | 46,800 |
| Total | 57,800 | 57,800 |
8. Balance as per passbook of Mr. Kumar is 3,000. (a) Cheque paid into bank but not yet cleared — Ram Kumar ₹ 1,000; Kishore Kumar ₹ 500 (b) Bank Charges ₹ 300 (c) Cheque issued but not presented — Hameed ₹ 2,000; Kapoor ₹ 500 (d) Interest entered in the passbook but not entered in the cash book ₹ 100. Prepare a bank reconciliation statement.
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Balance as per passbook | 3,000 | – |
| Cheques paid in but not yet cleared (1,000 + 500) | 1,500 | – |
| Bank charges | 300 | – |
| Cheques issued but not presented (2,000 + 500) | – | 2,500 |
| Interest credited in passbook, not in cash book | – | 100 |
| Balance as per cash book | – | 2,200 |
| Total | 4,800 | 4,800 |
9. The passbook of Mr. Mohit current account showed a credit Balance of ₹ 20,000 on dated December 31, 2016. Prepare a Bank Reconciliation Statement with the following information. (i) A cheque of ₹ 400 drawn on his saving account has been shown on current account. (ii) He issued two cheques of ₹ 300 and ₹ 500 on of December 25, but only the Ist cheque was presented for payment. (iii) One cheque issued by Mr. Mohit of ₹ 500 on December 25, but it was not presented for payment whereas it was recorded twice in the cash book.
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Balance as per passbook | 20,000 | – |
| Cheque of saving account wrongly shown in current account | 400 | – |
| Cheque issued (₹ 500) but not presented [(ii)] | – | 500 |
| Cheque issued (₹ 500) not presented, recorded twice [(iii)] | – | 1,000 |
| Balance as per cash book | – | 18,900 |
| Total | 20,400 | 20,400 |
Unfavourable balance of cash book
10. On Ist January 2017, Rakesh had an overdraft of ₹ 8,000 as showed by his cash book. Cheques amounting to ₹ 2,000 had been paid in by him but were not collected by the bank by January 01, 2017. He issued cheques of ₹ 800 which were not presented to the bank for payment up to that day. There was a debit in his passbook of ₹ 60 for interest and ₹ 100 for bank charges. Prepare bank reconciliation statement for comparing both the balance.
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Overdraft as per cash book | – | 8,000 |
| Cheques deposited but not yet collected | – | 2,000 |
| Cheques issued but not presented for payment | 800 | – |
| Interest on overdraft debited by bank | – | 60 |
| Bank charges debited by bank | – | 100 |
| Overdraft as per passbook | 9,360 | – |
| Total | 10,160 | 10,160 |
11. Prepare bank reconciliation statement. (i) Overdraft shown as per cash book on December 31, 2017 ₹ 10,000. (ii) Bank charges for the above period also debited in the passbook ₹ 100. (iii) Interest on overdraft for six months ending December 31, 2017 ₹ 380 debited in the passbook. (iv) Cheques issued but not incashed prior to December 31, 2017 amounted to ₹ 2,150. (v) Interest on Investment collected by the bank and credited in the passbook ₹ 600. (vi) Cheques paid into bank but not cleared before December, 31, 2017 were ₹ 1,100.
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Overdraft as per cash book | – | 10,000 |
| Bank charges debited in passbook | – | 100 |
| Interest on overdraft debited in passbook | – | 380 |
| Cheques issued but not encashed | 2,150 | – |
| Interest on investment collected by bank | 600 | – |
| Cheques paid in but not cleared | – | 1,100 |
| Overdraft as per passbook | 8,830 | – |
| Total | 11,580 | 11,580 |
12. Kumar find that the bank balance shown by his cash book on December 31, 2017 is ₹ 90,600 (Credit) but the passbook shows a difference due to the following reason: A cheque (post dated) for ₹ 1,000 has been debited in the bank column of the cash book but not presented for payment. Also, a cheque for ₹ 8,000 drawn in favour of Manohar has not yet been presented for payment. Cheques totaling ₹ 1,500 deposited in the bank have not yet been collected and cheque for ₹ 5,000 has been dishonoured.
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Overdraft as per cash book | – | 90,600 |
| Post-dated cheque debited in cash book, not presented | – | 1,000 |
| Cheque drawn in favour of Manohar not presented | 8,000 | – |
| Cheques deposited but not yet collected | – | 1,500 |
| Cheque deposited dishonoured | – | 5,000 |
| Overdraft as per passbook | 90,100 | – |
| Total | 98,100 | 98,100 |
13. On December 31, 2017, the cash book of Mittal Bros. Showed an overdraft of ₹ 6,920. From the following particulars prepare a Bank Reconciliation Statement and ascertain the balance as per passbook. (1) Debited by bank for ₹ 200 on account of Interest on overdraft and ₹ 50 on account of charges for collecting bills. (2) Cheques drawn but not encashed before December, 31, 2017 for ₹ 4,000. (3) The bank has collected interest and has credited ₹ 600 in passbook. (4) A bill receivable for ₹ 700 previously discounted with the bank had been dishonoured and debited in the passbook. (5) Cheques paid into bank but not collected and credited before December 31, 2017 amounted ₹ 6,000.
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Overdraft as per cash book | – | 6,920 |
| Interest on overdraft debited by bank | – | 200 |
| Bill-collection charges debited by bank | – | 50 |
| Cheques drawn but not encashed | 4,000 | – |
| Interest collected and credited by bank | 600 | – |
| Bill receivable discounted, dishonoured | – | 700 |
| Cheques paid in but not collected | – | 6,000 |
| Overdraft as per passbook | 9,170 | – |
| Total | 13,770 | 13,770 |
Unfavourable balance of the passbook
14. Prepare bank reconciliation statement of Shri Bhandari as on March 31, 2017. (i) The Payment of a cheque for ₹ 550 was recorded twice in the passbook. (ii) Withdrawal column of the passbook under cast by ₹ 200. (iii) A Cheque of ₹ 200 has been debited in the bank column of the Cash Book but it was not sent to bank at all. (iv) A Cheque of ₹ 300 debited to Bank column of the cash book was not sent to the bank. (v) ₹ 500 in respect of dishonoured cheque were entered in the passbook but not in the cash book. Overdraft as per passbook is ₹ 20,000.
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Overdraft as per passbook | – | 20,000 |
| Payment recorded twice in passbook | 550 | – |
| Withdrawal column of passbook undercast | – | 200 |
| Cheque (₹ 200) debited in cash book but not banked | 200 | – |
| Cheque (₹ 300) debited in cash book but not banked | 300 | – |
| Dishonoured cheque entered in passbook only | 500 | – |
| Overdraft as per cash book | 18,650 | – |
| Total | 20,200 | 20,200 |
15. Overdraft shown by the passbook of Mr. Murli is ₹ 20,000. Prepare bank reconciliation statement on dated March 31, 2017. (i) Bank charges debited as per passbook ₹ 500. (ii) Cheques recorded in the cash book but not sent to the bank for collection ₹ 2,500. (iii) Received a payment directly from customer ₹ 4,600. (iv) Cheque issued but not presented for payment ₹ 6,980. (v) Interest credited by the bank ₹ 100. (vi) LIC paid by bank ₹ 2,500. (vii) Cheques deposited with the bank but not collected ₹ 3,500.
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Overdraft as per passbook | – | 20,000 |
| Bank charges debited in passbook | 500 | – |
| Cheques recorded in cash book but not sent for collection | 2,500 | – |
| Payment received directly from customer | – | 4,600 |
| Cheque issued but not presented for payment | – | 6,980 |
| Interest credited by the bank | – | 100 |
| LIC premium paid by bank | 2,500 | – |
| Cheques deposited but not collected | 3,500 | – |
| Overdraft as per cash book | 22,680 | – |
| Total | 31,680 | 31,680 |
16. Raghav & Co. have two bank accounts. Account No. I and Account No. II. From the following particulars relating to Account No. I, find out the balance on that account of March 31, 2017 according to the cash book of the firm. (i) Cheques paid into bank prior to March 31, 2017, but not credited for ₹ 10,000. (ii) Transfer of funds from account No. II to account no. I recorded by the bank on March 31, 2017 but entered in the cash book after that date for ₹ 8,000. (iii) Cheques issued prior to March 31, 2017 but not presented until after that date for ₹ 7,429. (iv) Bank charges debited by bank not entered in the cash book for ₹ 200. (v) Interest Debited by the bank not entered in the cash book ₹ 580. (vi) Overdraft as per Passbook ₹ 18,990.
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Overdraft as per passbook | – | 18,990 |
| Cheques paid in but not credited | – | 10,000 |
| Funds transferred from A/c II, in passbook not cash book | 8,000 | – |
| Cheques issued but not presented for payment | 7,429 | – |
| Bank charges debited by bank, not in cash book | – | 200 |
| Interest debited by bank, not in cash book | – | 580 |
| Overdraft as per cash book | 23,639 | – |
| Total | 29,770 | 29,770 |
17. Prepare a bank reconciliation statement from the following particulars and show the balance as per cash book. (i) Balance as per passbook on March 31, 2017 overdrawn ₹ 20,000. (ii) Interest on bank overdraft not entered in the cash book ₹ 2,000. (iii) ₹ 200 insurance premium paid by bank has not been entered in the cash book. (iv) Cheques drawn in the last week of March 2017, but not cleared till date for ₹ 3,000 and ₹ 3,500. (v) Cheques deposited into bank on February 2017, but yet to be credited on dated March 31, 2017 ₹ 6,000. (vii) Wrongly debited by bank ₹ 500.
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Overdraft as per passbook | – | 20,000 |
| Interest on overdraft, not in cash book | 2,000 | – |
| Insurance premium paid by bank, not in cash book | 200 | – |
| Cheques drawn but not cleared (3,000 + 3,500) | – | 6,500 |
| Cheques deposited but not yet credited | 6,000 | – |
| Wrongly debited by bank | 500 | – |
| Overdraft as per cash book | 17,800 | – |
| Total | 26,500 | 26,500 |
18. The passbook of Mr. Randhir showed an overdraft of ₹ 40,950 on March 31, 2017. Prepare bank reconciliation statement on March 31, 2017. (i) Out of cheques amounting to ₹ 8,000 drawn by Mr. Randhir on March 27 a cheque for ₹ 3,000 was encashed on April 2017. (ii) Credited by bank with ₹ 3,800 for interest collected by them, but the amount is not entered in the cash book. (iii) ₹ 10,900 paid in by Mr. Randhir in cash and by cheques on March, 31 cheques amounting to ₹ 3,800 were collected on April, 07. (iv) A Cheque of ₹ 780 credited in the passbook on March 28 being dishonoured is debited again in the passbook on April 01, 2017. There was no entry in the cash book about the dishonour of the cheque until April 15.
| Particulars | Plus (+) ₹ | Minus (–) ₹ |
|---|---|---|
| Overdraft as per passbook | – | 40,950 |
| Cheque drawn but not presented till March 31 | – | 3,000 |
| Interest collected by bank, not in cash book | – | 3,800 |
| Cheques deposited but not collected till March 31 | 3,800 | – |
| Cheque dishonoured in passbook, not in cash book | 780 | – |
| Overdraft as per cash book | 43,170 | – |
| Total | 47,750 | 47,750 |
Extra Practice Questions
Short Answer Type Questions
Q1. Why does the passbook show deposits on the credit side and withdrawals on the debit side?
Q2. Will ‘cheques issued but not presented for payment’ make the passbook balance higher or lower than the cash book?
Q3. How is a dishonoured cheque (deposited by the firm) treated in a BRS started from the cash book?
Q4. State two advantages of preparing a bank reconciliation statement regularly.
Q5. If the cash book shows a debit balance of ₹ 12,000 and the only difference is cheques issued but not presented of ₹ 2,000, what is the passbook balance?
Long Answer Type Questions
Q1. Distinguish between cash book and passbook with respect to who maintains them, the side on which deposits appear, and the nature of a favourable balance.
Q2. Explain how an overdraft is handled while preparing a bank reconciliation statement, with the rule for adding and deducting items.
Q3. ‘A bank reconciliation statement is both a control device and a tool to find the correct balance.’ Discuss.
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. A bank reconciliation statement is prepared by:
(a) the bank (b) the account holder (firm) (c) the debtors (d) the creditors
2. A favourable bank balance means:
(a) credit balance in the cash book (b) debit balance in the cash book (c) debit balance in the passbook (d) none of these
3. The passbook is a copy of:
(a) the customer’s account in the bank’s books (b) the cash column of the cash book (c) the firm’s ledger (d) the receipts and payments account
4. Cheques issued but not yet presented for payment will:
(a) reduce the passbook balance (b) make the passbook balance higher than the cash book (c) have no effect (d) reduce the cash book balance again
5. An overdraft as per cash book is shown by:
(a) a debit balance in the cash book (b) a credit balance in the cash book (c) a credit balance in the passbook (d) none of these
6. Interest credited by the bank but not recorded in the cash book will make the passbook balance:
(a) lower than the cash book (b) higher than the cash book (c) equal to the cash book (d) negative
7. Starting from the cash book balance, bank charges debited by the bank are:
(a) added (b) deducted (c) ignored (d) added twice
8. ‘Cheques deposited but not yet collected’ means the passbook balance is:
(a) higher than the cash book (b) lower than the cash book (c) the same as the cash book (d) nil
9. A bank reconciliation statement is mainly prepared to:
(a) reconcile the cash balance of the cash book (b) reconcile the bank balance per cash book with the passbook (c) prepare the trial balance (d) none of these
10. The amended (correct) cash book balance is found by adjusting the cash book for:
(a) cheques issued but not presented (b) cheques deposited but not collected (c) items in the passbook not yet recorded in the cash book and the firm’s errors (d) nothing
For each Assertion–Reason question, choose: (A) Both true and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion; (B) Both true but the Reason is not the correct explanation; (C) Assertion true, Reason false; (D) Assertion false, Reason true.
A-R 1. Assertion: The bank balance as per cash book and as per passbook usually differ.
Reason: Timing differences in recording transactions and errors by the firm or the bank cause the two balances to disagree.
A-R 2. Assertion: A favourable balance is a credit balance in the cash book.
Reason: A favourable balance means money standing to the firm’s credit at the bank.
A-R 3. Assertion: Cheques issued but not presented increase the passbook balance compared with the cash book.
Reason: The bank debits the firm’s account only when the cheque is actually presented for payment.
A-R 4. Assertion: An overdraft is treated as a negative figure in the bank reconciliation statement.
Reason: An overdraft means the firm has withdrawn more than its balance and has, in effect, borrowed from the bank.
A-R 5. Assertion: While starting a BRS from the passbook balance, the treatment of every item is reversed.
Reason: The passbook records transactions on the opposite side to the cash book.
Exam Tips & Common Mistakes
How to score full marks in this chapter
Always write the heading with the name and date (“Bank Reconciliation Statement of … as on …”). Clearly state the starting balance and whether it is a cash book or passbook figure. Use the two-column (+ / –) format and remember the master rule: cheques issued but not presented are added; cheques deposited but not collected are deducted (when starting from the cash book), and reverse everything when starting from the passbook. Treat an overdraft as a negative opening figure. Finally, make both columns total equal — the balancing figure is the other book’s balance — and underline the answer.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Confusing the two sides — deposits are debit in the cash book but credit in the passbook.
- Forgetting to reverse every treatment when the passbook balance is the starting point.
- Adding cheques deposited but not collected, or deducting cheques issued but not presented — it is the other way round.
- Treating an overdraft as a positive figure instead of a negative one.
- Mixing up ‘wrongly debited by the bank’ (reduces passbook) with ‘wrongly credited by the bank’ (increases passbook).
- Leaving the columns unequal — if they don’t tally, an item has been added instead of deducted (or vice versa).
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a Bank Reconciliation Statement in Class 11 Accountancy Chapter 5?
A Bank Reconciliation Statement (BRS) is a statement that reconciles the bank balance shown by a firm’s cash book with the balance shown by its passbook on a given date. It lists the items of difference — cheques not presented or not collected, bank charges, interest, direct deposits and errors — and adds or deducts them to explain the gap between the two balances.
Why do the cash book and passbook balances differ?
They differ mainly because of timing differences (cheques issued but not presented, cheques deposited but not collected, bank charges, interest, direct deposits and direct payments by the bank, and dishonoured cheques) and because of errors committed by the firm in the cash book or by the bank in the passbook.
How is an overdraft treated in a bank reconciliation statement?
An overdraft is a credit balance in the cash book and a debit balance in the passbook, and is treated as a negative figure at the start of the BRS. Items that increase the overdraft are placed to enlarge the negative balance and items that reduce it are added back, after which the balancing figure gives the overdraft as per the other book.
