Hi again. Besides my tendency to be details-specific (given my professional
background), I also had some college level accounting and understand
double-entry, reconciliation, and the basics.  No, I am not an accountant,
but I have been using GnuCash mostly successfully for more than twelve
years now.  I am new to this list, but not to the topics we're discussing.

Regarding using the wrong year for the reconciliation date, the program
suggests an approximate date based on the last, and at the moment that
recommendation is 9/24/22.  This is not in a vacuum, however, because all
of the unreconciled transactions between August '22 and present are still
in the ledger awaiting reconciliation against these 12 or so monthly
statements that I just re-downloaded.  If I'd simply entered the wrong
year, this would not be the case.

I'd hoped this would have been something familiar to someone, only that I
didn't know about because I hadn't been on the list previously.  Based on
the responses, it's beginning to look a little obscure now.

On Wed, Sep 27, 2023 at 10:52 AM Michael or Penny Novack <
stepbystepf...@comcast.net> wrote:

>
>
> > The purpose of reconciliation is to verify that from the last closing
> > date to the new closing date, the listed transactions cleared the
> > account and thus explain the change from the opening balance (last
> > closing balance) to the new closing balance listed on the statement.
> >
> > The actual balance, in your books, on a given day, or as of a given
> > day, is irrelevant to that reconciliation.
>
>
> Precisely. You EXPECT there to be a difference based on checks written
> (appear in the gnucash account) that have not yet cleared. In other
> words, the main part of the job (if no errors) is to verify that the
> total of checks written but uncleared matches the difference between the
> bank statement of the account and the gnucash account as of the date of
> the statement.
>
> When it still doesn't match you then need to find the error, a check not
> entered for the correct amount. Usually at your end but once I had one
> of these at a bank end.
>
> Michael D Novack
>
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