LTT KiraKira
Free Chart of Accounts Generator for Malaysian SMEs
A chart of accounts is the backbone of your bookkeeping — the structured list of categories every transaction gets sorted into. Get it right at the start and your reports make sense; get it wrong and you’ll be untangling it for years. This free tool builds a sensible, ready-to-use chart of accounts for your Malaysian business.
How a chart of accounts is built
A good chart follows a clear logic. The balance sheet accounts come first — what you own and owe, plus the owners’ stake: assets, liabilities and equity. Then come the profit-and-loss accounts that show performance over time: income, cost of sales and expenses. Within those, sensible sub-groupings (say, splitting expenses into direct, administrative and selling costs) keep your reports readable as the business grows. The generator sets all of this out for you in an orderly, numbered structure.
Built for SP, PS and Sdn. Bhd.
A sole proprietor doesn’t need the same equity accounts as a Sdn. Bhd., so the tool produces a chart suited to your business type — sole proprietor, partnership or company. The result is ready to adopt as-is, or to import into accounting software such as Bukku Cloud Accounting so you start your books on a clean, professional footing.
Three ways to keep your books in order
1. Use this tool free — just sign in with Google or Facebook to get started.
2. Ready for a complete accounting system? We recommend Bukku Cloud Accounting. Explore Bukku Cloud Accounting
3. Rather not handle the books at all? Let us take it off your hands. Explore LTT Accounting Services
Frequently asked questions
What is a chart of accounts?
The structured, numbered list of categories — assets, liabilities, equity, income and expenses — that every transaction in your books is recorded against.
How is a chart of accounts structured?
Balance sheet accounts first (assets, liabilities, equity), then profit-and-loss accounts (income, cost of sales, expenses), with sub-groups to keep reports clear.
Can I import this into accounting software?
Yes — the generated chart is designed to be adopted directly or imported into a system such as Bukku.
Does it differ for a sole proprietor versus a Sdn. Bhd.?
Yes — equity and a few other accounts differ by business type, so the tool tailors the chart to whichever you choose.