For example, office supplies are considered an asset until they are used in the course of doing business, at which time they become an expense. At the end of each accounting period, adjusting entries are necessary to recognize the portion of prepaid expenses that have become actual expenses through use or the passage of time.
Consider the previous example from the point of view of the customer who pays $1,800 for six months of insurance coverage.
Initially, she records the transaction by increasing one asset account (prepaid insurance) with a debit and by decreasing another asset account (cash) with a credit.
After one month, she makes an adjusting entry to increase (debit) insurance expense for $300 and to decrease (credit) prepaid insurance for $300.
Prepaid expenses in one company's accounting records are often—but not always—unearned revenues in another company's accounting records.
Office supplies provide an example of a prepaid expense that does not appear on another company's books as unearned revenue.
Accounting records that do not include adjusting entries to show the expiration or consumption of prepaid expenses overstate assets and net income and understate expenses.