The general ledger is the complete record — every account, every transaction, full history. The trial balance is a one-page summary drawn from it: each account’s ending balance in a debit or credit column, totaled to prove the books balance. One is the book; the other is the checksum.
The comparison
| General ledger | Trial balance | |
|---|---|---|
| Contains | Every transaction, by account | Only ending balances |
| Detail level | Line-by-line history | One line per account |
| Purpose | The record itself | Verify debits = credits; feed statements |
| When used | Continuously | At period end (or on demand) |
How they work together
Transactions are journalized, posted to the What Is a Ledger? The General Ledger, Explained, and at period end each account’s balance is extracted into the Trial Balance. If its columns disagree, the error hunt goes back into the ledger — the trial balance tells you something is wrong; the ledger tells you what. After adjustments, the adjusted trial balance becomes the direct source for the financial statements.
The practical intuition
Auditors and controllers live in this loop: scan the trial balance for accounts that look wrong (a payable with a debit balance, a margin account out of line), then drill into that account’s ledger detail to find the story. Summary first, detail second — the two documents are one investigation workflow.
Which comes first, ledger or trial balance?
The ledger — the trial balance is extracted from ledger balances at a point in time.
Can the trial balance replace the ledger?
No — it has no transaction detail. It can prove totals balance but cannot explain any number.
Do modern systems still need a trial balance?
Software balances every entry by force, but the trial balance survives as the standard review and statement-preparation report.
