Definition
An accounting entry that increases assets or decreases liabilities in the left column of the ledger, or in normal-person terms, money leaving your bank account. It's the financial industry's fancy word for "subtraction" that confuses everyone because in banking, a debit increases your account from the bank's perspective but decreases it from yours. The reason accountants have job security is explaining why debits aren't always subtractions.
Example Usage
The $4.50 coffee was recorded as a debit to my checking account, which my budget spreadsheet recorded as a mistake.
Source: Common accounting terminology
Related Terms
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See “debit” in Corporate Speak, Gen-Z Slang, Pirate Speak, and more.
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