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Here is my scenario:
I've issued a $10 Invoice. Costumer paid $10, merchant processor charged $0.69 processing fee and deposited $9.31 net into my bank account. I had to issue a full refund of $10 to costumer. Merchant processor withdrew $9.61 from my bank account as they partially refund the processing fee ($0.30) when I refund a payment. Costumer received his full $10 back.
I've created a Refund Receipt of $10. When I try to match the $9.61 bank withdrawal, the $10 refund receipt doesn't show up.
Other refunds that I create that are of the same amount of the bank withdraw show up with no problems when I try to match them to the bank transaction.
How can I match that refund?
Solved! Go to Solution.
There are something I don't like in Lynda's approach.
Here is the thing:
I would like to keep my sales and expenses to do that sale separate. So I would prefer to have a record of $10 sale and $0.69 processing fee (stored in the special Expense or Cost of Gods sold account).
If you edit you Refund Receipt to have a value of $9.31 you decrease your sale to $9.31 and the total will be positive sale of $0.69 (balanced by the expense of $0.69).
For me this distorts later analysis of your sale.
(comment: After submitting my answer I have realised, that Lynda's point is to add Non-inventory item for which sales goes to the Expense account, instead of Income account, but this looks odd to me).
I would prefer to have a pure Refund Receipt of $10 matched to the Sales Receipt of $10 and Expense of $0.69 balanced to the Deposit to that account of $0.69 as a processing fee refund.
So, what you can do:
- Create a special Clearing Account (type: bank account) if you don't have one. You would use it only for resolving issues like this, the balance of this account should always be 0 once you finish the recording of your transatction.
- Create a $10 Refund receipt to be funded from Clearing account. After that you would have -$10 balance on the clearing account.
- In your Bank account write this $9.31 decrease as a transfer to the Clearing account. This would increase the balance of you Clearing account on $9.31 making it -$0.69.
- Create a Deposit to Clearing account, chose "Add other funds to this account", select the account you use for tracking merchant fee and enter $0.69 amount. The total for you Clearing account becomes 0.
Now you have two records in the Sales section and two records on the merchant fee tracking account (Increase when you pay the comission and decrease when you Deposit this ammount to the Clearing account).
Hope this helps (and I am also interested to see the comments with the explanation of possible drawbacks of this approach).
There are something I don't like in Lynda's approach.
Here is the thing:
I would like to keep my sales and expenses to do that sale separate. So I would prefer to have a record of $10 sale and $0.69 processing fee (stored in the special Expense or Cost of Gods sold account).
If you edit you Refund Receipt to have a value of $9.31 you decrease your sale to $9.31 and the total will be positive sale of $0.69 (balanced by the expense of $0.69).
For me this distorts later analysis of your sale.
(comment: After submitting my answer I have realised, that Lynda's point is to add Non-inventory item for which sales goes to the Expense account, instead of Income account, but this looks odd to me).
I would prefer to have a pure Refund Receipt of $10 matched to the Sales Receipt of $10 and Expense of $0.69 balanced to the Deposit to that account of $0.69 as a processing fee refund.
So, what you can do:
- Create a special Clearing Account (type: bank account) if you don't have one. You would use it only for resolving issues like this, the balance of this account should always be 0 once you finish the recording of your transatction.
- Create a $10 Refund receipt to be funded from Clearing account. After that you would have -$10 balance on the clearing account.
- In your Bank account write this $9.31 decrease as a transfer to the Clearing account. This would increase the balance of you Clearing account on $9.31 making it -$0.69.
- Create a Deposit to Clearing account, chose "Add other funds to this account", select the account you use for tracking merchant fee and enter $0.69 amount. The total for you Clearing account becomes 0.
Now you have two records in the Sales section and two records on the merchant fee tracking account (Increase when you pay the comission and decrease when you Deposit this ammount to the Clearing account).
Hope this helps (and I am also interested to see the comments with the explanation of possible drawbacks of this approach).
Are you entering these manually? If so you could still show the $10.00 refund to the customer but also account for the refund of the merchant fee (so instead of the $10 being the total of the deduction, you only have a net transaction of $9.61. You will need to have an item for the merchant fee that points to the bank service charge or the acct. you use for that. You would enter the merchant charge as a negative amount.
$10.00 (income acct)
-.39 merchant/bank fees (to show the reimbursed amount)
Net item receipt: $9.61
Did you make the refund in the journal entry to accounts receivable? You have to add the customer name to the transaction as well.
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