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Hello bonnie24,
Great question! I know it's essential that you have both the invoice and the processing fee notated in your books, so I'll help you out with this.
Depending on what payment processor you're using, the service may create the expense for you automatically. For instance, with QuickBooks Online Payments, the program will create the transaction payment and the associated fee for you. One way to check for these expenses is to check your account register. The program likely created a QuickBooks Payments Fees account for you, but you can double-check where your fees are mapping through by going to the Gear icon, choosing Account and Settings, and reviewing the Payments tab. Once you know what account to look for, follow these steps.
If you're not seeing the expense transactions you're looking for there, you can create the expense manually through the +New icon and Expense transaction type. Learn more about that here: Enter, edit, or delete expenses in QuickBooks Online
In the event that you're using a third-party provider that doesn't create the expense transactions for you, here's how to record this. Simply record the payment in full on the invoice, then create an expense transaction for the fee. I know that the payment provider took the fee from the amount you're receiving, but in QuickBooks Online, the two need to be recorded as separate transactions.
I hope that helps! I'm here if you have further questions.
@LauraAB wrote:Hello bonnie24,
Great question! I know it's essential that you have both the invoice and the processing fee notated in your books, so I'll help you out with this.
Depending on what payment processor you're using, the service may create the expense for you automatically. For instance, with QuickBooks Online Payments, the program will create the transaction payment and the associated fee for you. One way to check for these expenses is to check your account register. The program likely created a QuickBooks Payments Fees account for you, but you can double-check where your fees are mapping through by going to the Gear icon, choosing Account and Settings, and reviewing the Payments tab. Once you know what account to look for, follow these steps.
- Select Accounting from the left menu.
- Find or search for the account in question on the Chart of Accounts tab.
- Select Run report to see all associated transactions.
If you're not seeing the expense transactions you're looking for there, you can create the expense manually through the +New icon and Expense transaction type. Learn more about that here: Enter, edit, or delete expenses in QuickBooks Online
In the event that you're using a third-party provider that doesn't create the expense transactions for you, here's how to record this. Simply record the payment in full on the invoice, then create an expense transaction for the fee. I know that the payment provider took the fee from the amount you're receiving, but in QuickBooks Online, the two need to be recorded as separate transactions.
I hope that helps! I'm here if you have further questions.
OK I entered the Expense Manually . Now I need the Customer Credited and the Expense recorded. Where do I do that ? Bonnie C
Hi Bonnie. Great job recording the expense for the fee transaction! I just want to make sure I'm on the same page. You say you want to now create a customer credit for the fee. Is this so that you can reimburse them for the fee on their next transaction? If you want your customer to pay for the fee, you won't be creating a customer credit.
I hope this makes sense. Here's how to create the customer credit in the case that you'd like to put the fee amount towards their future transactions: Enter and apply credit memos and delayed credits in QuickBooks Online.
If you have any other questions about this, it may be more beneficial for you to reach out to our live tech support team. I'm confident an agent will be able to get you back on track.
Cheers.
I use a third party for credit cards and this is how I handle the fees:
By doing it this way, you can see in the customer's file that they like to pay by credit card and you can even track the expense to the job if you use job costing!
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