Retirement of a Partner: Capital, Loan, and Final Settlement
A clear Class 12 Accountancy guide to the retiring partner's capital account, loan account, cash payment, instalments, and final balance sheet treatment.
- 12th
- Accounts
Retirement of a partner looks long because many adjustments arrive at the same time.
There may be goodwill, revaluation, reserves, accumulated losses, drawings, capital adjustment, cash payment, and a loan account. Students often know each small topic separately, but the full retirement question still feels heavy because the final settlement brings everything together.
The calm way to understand it is this:
The retiring partner is leaving the firm, so the firm must first find the exact amount due to that partner. After that, the firm must decide how the amount will be settled.
That is the whole story.
Once this idea becomes clear, the capital account and loan account stop looking like two separate puzzles. They become two stages of the same settlement.
What Retirement of a Partner Means
When a partner retires, that partner stops being a partner in the firm, but the firm usually continues with the remaining partners.
The retiring partner had a claim in the old firm. That claim may include capital, share of goodwill, share of revaluation profit, share of reserves, and other amounts due. It may also be reduced by drawings, share of revaluation loss, accumulated losses, or any amount payable by the retiring partner.
So the accounts have to answer two questions:
| Question | Accountancy answer |
|---|---|
| How much is due to the retiring partner? | Prepare the retiring partner’s capital account |
| How will that amount be settled? | Pay cash or bank, transfer to loan, or use both |
This is why the capital account comes first and the settlement entry comes after it.
The Order You Should Follow
A full retirement question becomes easier when you follow the same order every time.
| Step | What to do |
|---|---|
| 1 | Read the old ratio, new ratio, and retiring partner’s name |
| 2 | Calculate the gaining ratio if goodwill adjustment needs it |
| 3 | Treat goodwill as instructed |
| 4 | Record revaluation profit or loss |
| 5 | Transfer reserves, accumulated profits, and accumulated losses |
| 6 | Prepare partners’ capital accounts or current accounts |
| 7 | Find the amount due to the retiring partner |
| 8 | Settle the amount through bank, loan account, or both |
| 9 | Show the remaining balances in the new balance sheet |
This order matters because settlement should happen only after the retiring partner’s account contains all adjustments.
If you settle first and then remember goodwill or revaluation later, the final amount will almost certainly be wrong.
What Goes Into the Retiring Partner’s Capital Account
The retiring partner’s capital account collects everything that increases or reduces the amount payable to the retiring partner.
Think of it as the final statement of that partner’s claim.
Amounts that usually increase the retiring partner’s claim are credited to the capital account.
Amounts that usually reduce the retiring partner’s claim are debited to the capital account.
| Credit side, increases amount due | Debit side, reduces amount due |
|---|---|
| Opening capital balance | Drawings |
| Share of goodwill | Interest on drawings |
| Share of revaluation profit | Share of revaluation loss |
| Share of general reserve | Share of accumulated losses |
| Share of Profit and Loss credit balance | Existing goodwill written off, if applicable |
| Partner salary or commission, if given | Amount paid immediately |
| Interest on capital, if given | Amount transferred to loan account |
The closing treatment depends on the question. If the retiring partner is paid immediately, the capital account is closed by bank or cash. If the amount is not paid immediately, it is transferred to the retiring partner’s loan account.
A Simple Format for the Retiring Partner’s Capital Account
Here is a clean way to think about the format.
| Retiring Partner’s Capital Account | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| To Revaluation A/c, if loss | Amount | |
| To Accumulated Losses A/c | Amount | |
| To Drawings A/c | Amount | |
| To Bank A/c, amount paid | Amount | |
| To Retiring Partner’s Loan A/c, balance transferred | Amount | |
| By Balance b/d | Amount | |
| By Goodwill adjustment | Amount | |
| By Revaluation A/c, if profit | Amount | |
| By General Reserve A/c | Amount | |
| By Profit and Loss A/c credit balance | Amount |
This is not a fixed list for every question. It is a guide.
Every retirement question must be read carefully because the exact items depend on the information given.
Why Goodwill Affects Final Settlement
Goodwill appears in retirement because the retiring partner gives up a share in future profits.
The remaining partners will gain that share. So the retiring partner is usually compensated for the share of goodwill that belongs to them.
If goodwill is adjusted through capital accounts and is not raised in the books, the usual logic is:
| Partner | Treatment |
|---|---|
| Gaining partners | Debited in gaining ratio |
| Retiring partner | Credited with share of goodwill |
For example, A, B, and C share profits in the ratio 3:2:1. C retires. The firm’s goodwill is valued at Rs. 90,000, and A and B continue in the ratio 3:2.
C’s share of goodwill is:
| Particular | Amount |
|---|---|
| Firm’s goodwill | Rs. 90,000 |
| C’s share | 1/6 |
| C’s share of goodwill | Rs. 15,000 |
A and B gain C’s share in the ratio 3:2.
| Partner | Goodwill adjustment |
|---|---|
| A debited | Rs. 9,000 |
| B debited | Rs. 6,000 |
| C credited | Rs. 15,000 |
The entry is:
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| A’s Capital A/c Dr. | Rs. 9,000 | |
| B’s Capital A/c Dr. | Rs. 6,000 | |
| To C’s Capital A/c | Rs. 15,000 |
This increases the amount due to C because C is being compensated for giving up future profit share.
Revaluation and Reserves Also Reach the Capital Account
At retirement, assets and liabilities may be revalued before the retiring partner is settled.
If Revaluation Account shows profit, all old partners, including the retiring partner, are credited in the old profit-sharing ratio.
If Revaluation Account shows loss, all old partners, including the retiring partner, are debited in the old profit-sharing ratio.
The same past-ownership idea applies to reserves and accumulated items.
| Item | Normal treatment |
|---|---|
| General reserve | Credited to old partners in old ratio |
| Profit and Loss credit balance | Credited to old partners in old ratio |
| Profit and Loss debit balance | Debited to old partners in old ratio |
| Advertisement suspense | Debited to old partners in old ratio |
Why does the retiring partner get a share of reserve?
Because the reserve was created before retirement. It belongs to the old partners, not only the continuing partners.
Full Example: Finding the Amount Due
Let us use one simple example and follow it slowly.
A, B, and C are partners sharing profits and losses in the ratio 3:2:1. C retires. A and B will continue in the ratio 3:2.
On the date of retirement:
| Particular | Amount |
|---|---|
| C’s capital balance | Rs. 80,000 |
| Firm’s goodwill | Rs. 90,000 |
| Revaluation profit | Rs. 30,000 |
| General reserve | Rs. 60,000 |
| C’s drawings | Rs. 4,000 |
C’s share in the old ratio is 1/6.
Now calculate each adjustment.
| Item | Calculation | C’s share |
|---|---|---|
| Goodwill | Rs. 90,000 x 1/6 | Rs. 15,000 |
| Revaluation profit | Rs. 30,000 x 1/6 | Rs. 5,000 |
| General reserve | Rs. 60,000 x 1/6 | Rs. 10,000 |
| Drawings | Given | Rs. 4,000 |
Now prepare C’s capital account in working form.
| C’s Capital Account | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| To Drawings A/c | Rs. 4,000 | |
| To Balance transferred for settlement | Rs. 106,000 | |
| By Balance b/d | Rs. 80,000 | |
| By A’s Capital A/c and B’s Capital A/c, goodwill | Rs. 15,000 | |
| By Revaluation A/c | Rs. 5,000 | |
| By General Reserve A/c | Rs. 10,000 | |
| Total | Rs. 110,000 | Rs. 110,000 |
So the amount due to C is Rs. 106,000.
That is the number the firm must settle.
Three Ways to Settle the Retiring Partner
Once the amount due is known, the question may settle it in different ways.
1. Full Payment Immediately
If the retiring partner is paid in full by bank:
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Retiring Partner’s Capital A/c Dr. | Amount due | |
| To Bank A/c | Amount due |
In our example, if C is paid Rs. 106,000 immediately:
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| C’s Capital A/c Dr. | Rs. 106,000 | |
| To Bank A/c | Rs. 106,000 |
After this, C’s capital account is closed and no C’s loan account is needed.
2. Full Amount Transferred to Loan Account
If the firm cannot pay immediately, the whole amount may be transferred to the retiring partner’s loan account.
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Retiring Partner’s Capital A/c Dr. | Amount due | |
| To Retiring Partner’s Loan A/c | Amount due |
In our example:
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| C’s Capital A/c Dr. | Rs. 106,000 | |
| To C’s Loan A/c | Rs. 106,000 |
C is no longer a partner, but the firm now owes C money as a loan liability.
3. Part Payment and Part Loan
This is very common in exam questions.
Suppose C is paid Rs. 46,000 immediately and the balance is transferred to C’s loan account.
Amount due to C is Rs. 106,000.
| Settlement | Amount |
|---|---|
| Paid through bank | Rs. 46,000 |
| Transferred to loan account | Rs. 60,000 |
| Total amount due | Rs. 106,000 |
The entry is:
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| C’s Capital A/c Dr. | Rs. 106,000 | |
| To Bank A/c | Rs. 46,000 | |
| To C’s Loan A/c | Rs. 60,000 |
This closes C’s capital account. After this point, C’s unpaid amount is shown through C’s loan account.
How the Retiring Partner’s Loan Account Works
The loan account is prepared only when the retiring partner’s amount is not paid fully at retirement.
The loan account records:
- the amount transferred from the retiring partner’s capital account
- interest on the unpaid balance, if given
- instalments or payments made
- balance still outstanding
The basic entries are:
| Situation | Entry |
|---|---|
| Interest becomes due | Interest A/c Dr. To Retiring Partner’s Loan A/c |
| Instalment or payment is made | Retiring Partner’s Loan A/c Dr. To Bank A/c |
Interest is credited to the retiring partner’s loan account because it increases the amount payable to that partner.
Payment is debited to the retiring partner’s loan account because it reduces the liability.
Loan Account Example With Instalments
Suppose Rs. 60,000 is transferred to C’s loan account. The firm agrees to pay interest at 10% per annum on the unpaid balance. The firm pays Rs. 30,000 at the end of Year 1, Rs. 30,000 at the end of Year 2, and the remaining balance at the end of Year 3.
Year 1
Interest for Year 1:
Rs. 60,000 x 10/100 = Rs. 6,000
| C’s Loan Account | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| To Bank A/c | Rs. 30,000 | |
| To Balance c/d | Rs. 36,000 | |
| By C’s Capital A/c | Rs. 60,000 | |
| By Interest A/c | Rs. 6,000 | |
| Total | Rs. 66,000 | Rs. 66,000 |
At the end of Year 1, Rs. 36,000 remains unpaid.
Year 2
Interest for Year 2:
Rs. 36,000 x 10/100 = Rs. 3,600
| C’s Loan Account | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| To Bank A/c | Rs. 30,000 | |
| To Balance c/d | Rs. 9,600 | |
| By Balance b/d | Rs. 36,000 | |
| By Interest A/c | Rs. 3,600 | |
| Total | Rs. 39,600 | Rs. 39,600 |
At the end of Year 2, Rs. 9,600 remains unpaid.
Year 3
Interest for Year 3:
Rs. 9,600 x 10/100 = Rs. 960
| C’s Loan Account | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| To Bank A/c | Rs. 10,560 | |
| By Balance b/d | Rs. 9,600 | |
| By Interest A/c | Rs. 960 | |
| Total | Rs. 10,560 | Rs. 10,560 |
After this payment, the loan account is closed.
Which Interest Rate Should You Use?
Most school-level questions clearly give the interest rate on the retiring partner’s loan. If the question gives a rate, use that rate.
If the question gives an instalment plan but does not mention interest, read it carefully before adding interest on your own. Some questions want a simple payment schedule without interest.
If the question specifically says that there is no agreement and asks for treatment of the unpaid retiring partner’s amount, then the standard rule often discussed is interest at 6% per annum on the unpaid amount, unless the question asks for a share of profits earned by using that unpaid amount.
For normal exam practice, the safest habit is:
| Situation | What to do |
|---|---|
| Interest rate is given | Use the given rate |
| Payment is stated as without interest | Do not add interest |
| Question is silent about interest | Do not invent interest unless your textbook or teacher expects the special rule |
| Question mentions no agreement and unpaid amount | Apply the rule asked in the question |
Read the Instalment Wording Very Carefully
Loan account questions often become tricky because of wording.
The question may say:
| Wording | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Instalment plus interest | Pay fixed principal amount and extra interest |
| Instalment including interest | The payment already includes interest |
| Interest on unpaid balance | Calculate interest only on the opening unpaid amount for that period |
| Balance paid in final instalment | Final payment may be different from earlier instalments |
If you treat “including interest” like “plus interest”, the loan account will go wrong.
Before making the loan account, underline the exact phrase about instalments and interest.
What Happens in the New Balance Sheet
After retirement, the new balance sheet belongs to the continuing firm.
The retiring partner should not appear under partners’ capital after the capital account is settled.
Instead:
| Item | Balance sheet treatment |
|---|---|
| Amount paid immediately | Reduces cash or bank |
| Amount transferred to retiring partner’s loan | Shown on liabilities side |
| Continuing partners’ capital balances | Shown under partners’ capital accounts |
| Revised assets and liabilities | Shown at revalued figures |
If part of the amount is transferred to C’s loan account, C’s Loan Account appears on the liabilities side until it is paid.
This is a common place where students make a mistake. They close the capital account correctly but forget to show the unpaid loan in the balance sheet.
Capital Account vs Loan Account
The difference is simple but very important.
| Basis | Capital account | Loan account |
|---|---|---|
| Used when | Partner is still being settled as a partner | Amount remains unpaid after retirement |
| Shows | Final claim after all adjustments | Liability still payable by firm |
| Includes | Goodwill, revaluation, reserves, drawings, settlement | Opening loan, interest, instalments, closing balance |
| Balance sheet position | Retiring partner’s capital should be closed after settlement | Outstanding balance appears as liability |
The capital account answers: “How much is due?”
The loan account answers: “How much is still unpaid after settlement?”
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Here are the errors students make most often in retirement settlement questions.
| Mistake | Better habit |
|---|---|
| Settling the retiring partner before all adjustments | Complete goodwill, revaluation, and accumulated items first |
| Forgetting the retiring partner’s share of reserves | Treat past reserves in the old ratio |
| Giving revaluation profit only to continuing partners | Share it among all old partners |
| Confusing capital account and loan account | Open loan account only for unpaid amount |
| Forgetting interest on retiring partner’s loan | Read the instalment instruction carefully |
| Showing retiring partner’s capital in the new balance sheet after transfer to loan | Show the unpaid loan as liability instead |
| Reducing bank by loan amount also | Reduce bank only by actual payment made |
The last mistake is very common.
If Rs. 46,000 is paid and Rs. 60,000 is transferred to loan, bank reduces by Rs. 46,000 only. The loan amount is not a bank payment yet. It is a liability.
A Quick Solving Checklist
Use this checklist when practising a retirement question:
- Write the old ratio and new ratio.
- Calculate gaining ratio if needed.
- Treat goodwill.
- Prepare Revaluation Account.
- Transfer reserves, accumulated profits, and accumulated losses.
- Prepare capital accounts or current accounts.
- Find the retiring partner’s final amount.
- Record bank payment and loan transfer.
- Prepare loan account if instalments are given.
- Show unpaid loan on the liabilities side of the new balance sheet.
This order keeps the answer neat and prevents double counting.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the first step in retirement of a partner?
The first step is to understand the old profit-sharing ratio, the retiring partner’s name, and the future profit-sharing arrangement of the continuing partners. After that, calculate the gaining ratio if goodwill adjustment requires it.
Why is the retiring partner’s capital account prepared?
It is prepared to find the final amount due to the retiring partner after recording capital, goodwill, revaluation profit or loss, reserves, accumulated losses, drawings, and other adjustments.
When is the retiring partner’s loan account opened?
It is opened when the amount due to the retiring partner is not paid fully at the time of retirement. The unpaid amount is transferred from the retiring partner’s capital account to the retiring partner’s loan account.
Is the retiring partner’s loan shown in the balance sheet?
Yes. The unpaid balance of the retiring partner’s loan account is shown on the liabilities side of the new balance sheet until it is paid.
Does bank reduce when an amount is transferred to loan account?
No. Bank reduces only when actual payment is made. If an amount is transferred to loan account, it becomes a liability and does not reduce bank immediately.
Why is interest credited to the retiring partner’s loan account?
Interest increases the amount payable to the retiring partner. So it is credited to the retiring partner’s loan account. When payment is made, the loan account is debited.
What is the biggest mistake in final settlement questions?
The biggest mistake is settling the retiring partner before completing all adjustments. Goodwill, revaluation, reserves, accumulated losses, drawings, and other items must be recorded first. Only then should the final amount be paid or transferred to loan.
How do I know whether to use capital account or current account?
Follow the question. If capitals are fixed, regular adjustments usually go to current accounts. If capitals are fluctuating, the adjustments usually go to capital accounts. The retiring partner’s final settlement should still be made according to the format and instructions given in the question.
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