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Disbursement, Repayment, and Accounting Entries

Chinese source: 放款、还款与账务分录 Locale: en-US Audience: Internal learning

Concept

Disbursement and repayment are the core accounting events in loan core. Disbursement creates a loan asset. Repayment recovers principal, receivables, income, or fees.

text
Disbursement: loan asset increases, customer funds increase
Repayment: customer funds decrease, loan asset or receivable decreases

Disbursement Processing

Disbursement commonly:

  1. Validates agreement, note, credit line, collateral, approval, and receiving account.
  2. Creates or confirms the loan note.
  3. Generates the repayment schedule.
  4. Books loan principal as a bank asset.
  5. Transfers funds to the customer account or designated receiving account.
  6. Creates business references, accounting entries, and audit trail.

Repayment Processing

Repayment may apply to:

  • Due principal.
  • Due interest.
  • Past-due principal.
  • Past-due interest.
  • Penalty interest and compound interest.
  • Fees or prepayment charges.

Repayment can be teller-initiated, auto-debit, batch debit, prepayment, partial repayment, payoff, or guarantor/collateral payment.

Typical Accounting Direction

This table is conceptual only. Actual GL accounts depend on the bank's accounting setup.

ScenarioDebitCredit
DisbursementLoan principal accountCustomer deposit account or disbursement clearing account
Principal repaymentCustomer deposit accountLoan principal account
Interest collectionCustomer deposit accountInterest income or interest receivable
Interest accrual/billingInterest receivableInterest income
Penalty interest collectionCustomer deposit accountPenalty interest income or receivable

Payment Allocation Order

When a payment is not enough to cover all due amounts, the system allocates it by rule, for example:

text
Fees -> penalty interest -> compound interest -> interest receivable -> past-due principal -> current principal

The actual order depends on bank policy and product parameters.

Risks

RiskExplanation
Disbursement does not create the correct note.Asset record and accounting diverge.
Payment allocation order is wrong.Remaining principal, delinquency, and income recognition are wrong.
Auto-debit runs twice.Causes over-collection and reconciliation issues.
Reversal only reverses accounting, not loan status.Note balance, schedule, and references become inconsistent.
Clearing accounts are not settled.Creates EOD and reconciliation breaks.
TopicUse
Repayment Schedules and Installment BreakdownUnderstand where due amounts come from.
Interest Accrual, Billing, Penalty Interest, and Compound InterestUnderstand interest components.
Delinquency, Collections, and Loan StatusUnderstand failed repayment consequences.