1. Start with the
bank balance from the bank statement
2. Determine if you have made any deposits that do not appear yet on the bank statement. List and total these "
deposits in transit."
3. Determine if you have any
outstanding checks (checks you have written and recorded in your checkbook but have not yet come through the bank). Make a check mark by each item that has cleared the bank as you match them up. When you finish going through the checks, the ones without a check mark are your outstanding checks. List them in the blanks under "outstanding checks" on the form and total the amount.
4. Add the bank balance (step 1) to the total deposits in transit (step 2), and subtract the outstanding checks (step 3). This is your
adjusted bank balance. If it matches your checkbook register ending balance, you are finished.
5. If adjusted bank balance does not match your checkbook register, it may differ by
bank fees or
interest payments shown on the bank statement that are not yet entered in your checkbook. You will need to enter those in your checkbook now and list them below your adjusted bank balance above. Update your adjusted bank balance and see that it matches your check register ending balance. If they do, you are finished.
6. If you still don't balance, you have missed something. You could be missing a transaction that the bank shows, have a transaction the bank does not show, or your transaction amount could be different from the amount the bank has for a transaction. You could even have a math error in your balance. Go back and check it all out again.
Here is a big-time math-trick tip for identifying errors - if the difference between your number and the bank's number is divisible by 9, one of you may have transposed two digits!