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Under UK HMRC guidance, certain costs which are passed on to customers can be treated as disbursements. If I record an purchase in the usual way (e.g. website domain registration fee), it goes into my balance sheet as a business expense. Similarly, when I charge that cost back to the customer, the income gets recorded as "Income" and affects turnover. If these items are true disbursements under UK HMRC rules, the initial purchase cost should not categorised as an expense and the reimbursement of the cost by the customer should not be categorised as part of turnover. It is just a pass-through cost. Is there any way in QuickBooks to accommodate this? Note: this is a specific HMRC meaning of the word "disbursement" and not simply a general payment to an employee or customer. See https://www.gov.uk/vat-costs-or-disbursements-passed-to-customers
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The link you provided is only in reference to VAT. The HMRC webpage does not discuss the presentation of these amount on either the Balance Sheet or Income Statement, only that for your reimbursable expenditures (payment that you make and then charge your customer for) you cannot claim any VAT paid as a tax credit, and you cannot charge VAT for those same amounts to your client.
For the set-up it would be best to use a Balance Sheet account, as that it is your intention to charge your customer for all of these amounts and not record and not have them factored into your net income calculation. Create an 'Other Current Asset' account named as 'Disbursements Receivable' for amounts you pay that you have yet to charge a customer. (Please double check with a UK CA as to whether or not this is the preferred treatment, they may still say to use either an income or expense account)
Most of the actual accounting work is best handled through the use of items and tax items/codes.
Here I am not familiar with UK VAT codes that may be available to you preset on UK QuickBooks. However, the idea is to create / use a sales tax item and sales tax code for your disbursement purchases so that you record the VAT you pay as an addition part of the cost of the disbursements you make. This could require creating a dummy vendor as a tax agency, in which you would leave the 'Tax tax on purchases separately to' blank, and creating duplicate of your sale tax item 'VAT on purchases' as VATD - VAT on Disbursements, and a new sale tax code "D" as Taxable linked to the sale tax item VATD for purchases (leave sales as blank)
For the disbursement purchases you make, you will need to create an Item in your Items List called 'Disbursements' as an other charge. You can use one or create as many needed with variations to the name (Materials, Fuel, & etc -Disbursements) to add detail to the 'Bills' you enter for supplier purchases or Invoices your create to customers. Check the item as being a reimbursable charge, you will reference the 'Disbursements Receivable' account for both Bills (purchase tax code D) and Invoices (tax code 'E' for exempt).
This way when you use the Enter Bill or Write cheques function to record disbursements you will use the 'Items' tab and select the 'Disbursements' items with the tax code D, so that the VAT you pay is calculated and entered as an additional part of the cost, and will not be claimed as a tax credit. (any other amounts not disbursements can be entered to the accounts on the expenses tab)
And when you Invoice your client, you will again use the same Disbursement items sales tax code E so that no VAT is charged on those items, VAT will only be calculated on the other sales/service you have provided items
The link you provided is only in reference to VAT. The HMRC webpage does not discuss the presentation of these amount on either the Balance Sheet or Income Statement, only that for your reimbursable expenditures (payment that you make and then charge your customer for) you cannot claim any VAT paid as a tax credit, and you cannot charge VAT for those same amounts to your client.
For the set-up it would be best to use a Balance Sheet account, as that it is your intention to charge your customer for all of these amounts and not record and not have them factored into your net income calculation. Create an 'Other Current Asset' account named as 'Disbursements Receivable' for amounts you pay that you have yet to charge a customer. (Please double check with a UK CA as to whether or not this is the preferred treatment, they may still say to use either an income or expense account)
Most of the actual accounting work is best handled through the use of items and tax items/codes.
Here I am not familiar with UK VAT codes that may be available to you preset on UK QuickBooks. However, the idea is to create / use a sales tax item and sales tax code for your disbursement purchases so that you record the VAT you pay as an addition part of the cost of the disbursements you make. This could require creating a dummy vendor as a tax agency, in which you would leave the 'Tax tax on purchases separately to' blank, and creating duplicate of your sale tax item 'VAT on purchases' as VATD - VAT on Disbursements, and a new sale tax code "D" as Taxable linked to the sale tax item VATD for purchases (leave sales as blank)
For the disbursement purchases you make, you will need to create an Item in your Items List called 'Disbursements' as an other charge. You can use one or create as many needed with variations to the name (Materials, Fuel, & etc -Disbursements) to add detail to the 'Bills' you enter for supplier purchases or Invoices your create to customers. Check the item as being a reimbursable charge, you will reference the 'Disbursements Receivable' account for both Bills (purchase tax code D) and Invoices (tax code 'E' for exempt).
This way when you use the Enter Bill or Write cheques function to record disbursements you will use the 'Items' tab and select the 'Disbursements' items with the tax code D, so that the VAT you pay is calculated and entered as an additional part of the cost, and will not be claimed as a tax credit. (any other amounts not disbursements can be entered to the accounts on the expenses tab)
And when you Invoice your client, you will again use the same Disbursement items sales tax code E so that no VAT is charged on those items, VAT will only be calculated on the other sales/service you have provided items
Can anyone confirm where the "job number" and "tick box for billable" is?
cheers
Hi there, jodage.
I'll provide information to confirm where are the job number and billable options in QuickBooks Desktop.
Currently, there's no default option in QBDT for job numbers. However, you can customize your sales transactions like invoices. This way, you can add fields to show the job number.
Here's how:
If you're referring from the customer's mentioned above which is 'Customer: Job' column, you'll see this under vendor transactions. Please note that this option is a default in QBDT. I attached a screenshot for visual reference.
For your concern about the billable box, you'll need to turn on this feature first in the preferences. After that, you're able to see the billable option on the bill page.
Here's how:
Please check this article on how to make sure that you have an accurate record of your job costs: Tracking job costs in QuickBooks Desktop. This also provides details on how to Run job costing reports to see how your business is doing on a job-by-job basis.
You can also refer to this article to see steps on how to fix common template issues in QuickBooks Desktop: Fix common issues when you use and customize templates.
Please know that you're always welcome to post if you have any other concerns. Wishing you and your business continued success.
Hi there
really appreciate the reply, but I can't find anything that your referring to nor is the customer column showing on my system.
Is this relevant to quickbooks online accounts in the uk?
many thanks
Hello, @jodage.
You can use a Job Name or Job Number to denote the specific job you're currently working on. Let me guide you how to track jobs in QuickBooks Desktop.
On the other hand, a billable expense is a specific expense and/or time entries you incur on your customer's behalf especially when you perform a job for them. Here's how:
Once you create an invoice for the job, you'd be prompted by QuickBooks there's an outstanding billable cost assigned to it.
However, if you're using QuickBooks Online UK, the billable expense feature is only available in QuickBooks Online Plus only. You'd want to turn on this feature in your account settings. Here's how:
You can read through this article for more detailed steps: Enter billable expenses.
Let me know if you have other questions about using QuickBooks in managing your job expense transactions. I'm always here to help.
Many thanks for the detailed explanation, greatly appreciated, however let me step through my query.
I am a uk user
I have quickbooks online essentials, not plus. So the answer is I can't utilise the billable expense, correct?
I do not have access to quickbooks desktop, I've tried to download the software but get prompted for a licence key that I can't find anywhere- the F2 button does not retrieve it. Is desktop available without additional fees to online essentials users?
Many thanks
Thank you for clarifying, @jodage.
Yes, you're correct. Recording billable expenses is only available for QuickBooks Online (QBO) Plus. You'll want to upgrade your QBO version to get the feature.
Here's how:
On the other hand, QuickBooks Desktop (QBDT) is another software which includes fees upon purchasing it.
As always, feel free to visit our QuickBooks Community help website if you need tips and related articles in the future.
Please touch base with me here for all of your QuickBooks needs, I'm always happy to help. Wishing you all the best and keep safe.
Hi,
Can you be able to let me know how did you do it?
We have the same issues.
We have tried the billable expense, but once we generated the report, it goes to expense.
What we wanted is for the amount not to be as income and not as expense.
We are using quickbooks online by the way
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