Chapter 6 of Class 11 Accountancy, Trial Balance and Rectification of Errors, teaches students how to test the arithmetical accuracy of books of accounts and how to fix any mistakes in accounting entries. It explains the preparation of the trial balance and different types of accounting errors like errors of omission, commission, and principle. This chapter is vital because even one small mistake can lead to a mismatch in the final accounts.
I’ve picked this chapter for a reason. When I first started learning accountancy, the word “trial balance” sounded technical and confusing. But soon I realised it’s nothing but a way to cross-check if all debits and credits in the ledger match. If they don’t, then we have to dig deeper to find the mistake. This trial-and-error process is not only important for exams but also for day-to-day accounting work. Many students get stuck when balances don’t match. So this chapter helps in learning where to look, what to fix, and how to make corrections systematically. That’s why I’m also sharing the free PDF for easier access.
What Is a Trial Balance?
A trial balance is a list of all ledger accounts with their debit or credit balances, prepared at the end of a period to check the mathematical accuracy of the books.
If the total of the debit column matches the total of the credit column, it means the books are arithmetically correct — though it doesn’t always mean error-free.
Purpose of Trial Balance
- To confirm that total debits equal total credits
- To help prepare the final accounts
- To locate and identify possible errors in bookkeeping
Format of Trial Balance
| Account Name | Debit (₹) | Credit (₹) |
|---|---|---|
| Cash | 10,000 | |
| Sales | 15,000 | |
| Purchases | 12,000 | |
| Capital | 20,000 | |
| Rent | 2,000 | |
| Total | 24,000 | 35,000 |
In this example, the trial balance does not tally, so we know there’s an error.
Types of Errors in Accounting
Even if the trial balance matches, there could still be errors in recording. Common types include:
- Error of Omission – A transaction is completely left out
- Error of Commission – Wrong amount posted or posted in wrong account
- Error of Principle – Violates accounting principles, like treating revenue expense as capital
- Compensating Error – One error offsets another, so the balance still tallies
- Error of Original Entry – Wrong figure entered in both debit and credit sides
Rectification of Errors
There are two stages of rectification:
- Before Trial Balance is prepared – Errors are corrected directly in the books
- After Trial Balance is prepared – A Suspense Account is opened to temporarily adjust the difference until the correct entry is found


















