Browse Accounting

Asset Account

An asset account records resources controlled by the business and tracks balances such as cash, receivables, inventory, and long-lived assets.

An asset account is a ledger account used to record resources the business controls and expects to use for future economic benefit. Asset accounts appear on the asset side of the balance sheet and include both current and noncurrent balances.

They are part of the permanent-account structure in bookkeeping, meaning their balances usually carry forward rather than being closed each reporting period.

Common asset-account categories

  • Current asset accounts: cash, accounts receivable, inventory, and prepaid items
  • Noncurrent asset accounts: property, equipment, long-term investments, and similar longer-lived resources
  • Intangible asset accounts: patents, trademarks, software, and other nonphysical assets

How asset accounts behave

Under standard double-entry logic, asset accounts normally increase with debits and decrease with credits.

1Dr Asset Account
2Cr Cash / Liability / Equity / Revenue

The specific offset depends on the transaction, but the key bookkeeping rule is that an asset account tracks a resource balance rather than period profit.

Why asset accounts matter

  • they organize the resource side of the accounting equation
  • they support liquidity, solvency, and turnover analysis
  • they help keep the general ledger structurally consistent
  • they distinguish ongoing balances from temporary nominal accounts

Asset account vs. asset

An asset is the underlying economic resource. An asset account is the bookkeeping record used to track that resource.

  • Liability Account
  • Equity Account
  • Accounting Equation
  • General Ledger

FAQs

Is cash an asset account?

Yes. Cash is one of the most basic asset accounts and normally has a debit balance.

Are asset accounts closed at year-end?

No. Asset accounts are usually permanent accounts and carry their balances forward.

Can an asset account have a credit balance?

It can in unusual situations such as errors or reclassification issues, but its normal balance is debit.
Revised on Monday, May 18, 2026