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The heart of this question is "is a journal entry that debits one account and credits another the same as a transfer?". However, I'll describe the confusion I had to ask the question:
This is all about the very first transaction in my business. Bank transaction number one was a deposit of £1000 into the newly-opened business bank account as a "director's loan". Following the web page on how to record a loan in Quickbooks, I have a new entry in my "chart of accounts" for "director's startup loan", and I'm happy with that. However, I've seen THREE ways to record that money being there, and they are:
1) In a video about learning booking with Quickbooks that didn't include automatic bank transaction importing, I was shown how to create a new bank deposit entry. In that entry, the account (in my case "director's startup loan") can be specified as where this money is allocated.
2) When my Quickbooks detects the bank transaction and asks me to "categorise" it, I have the option of saying it is a transfer to the "director's startup loan" account. This makes me wonder how this differs from a bank deposit entry, which I can create with the +New but such entries are not options on the "categorise your bank transactions" page.
3) The web page about recording loans says to create a journal entry, taking money from the bank account and putting it in the "director's startup loan" account using a debit and credit. While I could just follow that advice blindly, I feel I'm not going to understand what I'm doing until I've asked these questions.
So these are three ways of saying "that money that's in the bank account is to be allocated to this director's loan", and they all seem quite different. When is a bank deposit that names an account like a bank transaction classified as a transfer, and when it is like a journal entry that goes from the bank account to the relevant loan account?
Once I've finally got my very first transaction sorted, I hope things will get easier. :)
Glen
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi @Glen Monks
The quickest way I can think of to lighten your darkness is to say that every transaction you enter in QBO is a Journal. That's what the software is doing in the background - creating an underlying Journal. Actually, if you find Transaction History for any transaction in QBO you can view the Journal.
Imagine yourself back in the days of Bob Cratchit entering everything by hand in ledgers.
Now, for double-entry book-keeping ... for every credit you need a debit.
A Journal is simply a combination of credits & debits (summing to zero) to keep all the ledgers balanced.
QBO (& any accounting software) simply prettifies the whole thing & makes it usable in the same way Windows made computing usable I guess. It takes the underlying (& there-be-dragons type) Journals/Ledgers & covers them with a nice wrapper that's user-friendly.
(In the process, it makes everyone believe they're an accountant - but that's the fault of the advertising, not the actual software)
Choosing a particular transaction in QBO usually means that you've pre-specified the first account on the Journal - making the experience less bothersome. Entering a Category specifies the second.
As for the specific transaction you mention - any of the options will work because they all create the same underlying Journal.
Hope this helps.
Hi @Glen Monks
The quickest way I can think of to lighten your darkness is to say that every transaction you enter in QBO is a Journal. That's what the software is doing in the background - creating an underlying Journal. Actually, if you find Transaction History for any transaction in QBO you can view the Journal.
Imagine yourself back in the days of Bob Cratchit entering everything by hand in ledgers.
Now, for double-entry book-keeping ... for every credit you need a debit.
A Journal is simply a combination of credits & debits (summing to zero) to keep all the ledgers balanced.
QBO (& any accounting software) simply prettifies the whole thing & makes it usable in the same way Windows made computing usable I guess. It takes the underlying (& there-be-dragons type) Journals/Ledgers & covers them with a nice wrapper that's user-friendly.
(In the process, it makes everyone believe they're an accountant - but that's the fault of the advertising, not the actual software)
Choosing a particular transaction in QBO usually means that you've pre-specified the first account on the Journal - making the experience less bothersome. Entering a Category specifies the second.
As for the specific transaction you mention - any of the options will work because they all create the same underlying Journal.
Hope this helps.
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