
Learn about the chart of accounts in QuickBooks Online
by Intuit•1279• Updated 5 days ago
The chart of accounts is a complete list of your QuickBooks Online accounts and their balances. Use it to keep your books and records current.
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Get familiar with the chart of accounts
To view your chart of accounts: Follow this link to complete the steps in product
Your accounts are listed with columns for name, account type, detail type, balance in QuickBooks, and bank balance. Use the buttons above the chart to batch edit multiple accounts, print your chart of accounts, or edit the columns you see.
Account types and detail types determine the data that shows up in reports like the Balance Sheet and Profit & Loss.
If your account has a register, you can see its transaction history and current balance. To view the register or report in the chart of accounts, select View register or Run report.
Note: If an account doesn't have a register, run a report to see its transactions.
Learn about account types in the chart of accounts
The account type column categorizes transactions into a few main account types, including:
- Assets: Money spent on vehicles, equipment, buildings, or other assets used for business.
- Liabilities: Money you owe but haven't yet paid, like loans, mortgages, or lines of credit.
- Income: Money you earned or gained from your normal day-to-day business, like sales revenue or income from services rendered.
- Expenses: Money you spend on things you do every day, like advertising, office supplies, or rent.
Customize your chart of accounts
QuickBooks automatically sets up your chart of accounts, but you can customize it to meet your business needs. You can add or remove accounts, edit them, or reactivate them. You don't have to use account numbers, but your accountant may recommend it.
You can make an account inactive to remove it from your current chart of accounts. This prevents further transactions within it, but doesn't delete it from your records.
Learn about accounts that QuickBooks sets up for you
When you first set up QuickBooks Online, we create accounts based on your business entity. When you take certain actions in QuickBooks we’ll create the account to track them in if it doesn’t exist already.
Here are a few of the most common accounts QuickBooks creates for you:
- Accounts Payable (A/P): Outstanding bills that your business owes. If you have more than one A/P account, you can pick which one to use when you enter and pay bills.
- Accounts Receivable (A/R): Transactions related to customers who owe you money. If you have more than one A/R account, you can pick which one to use when you create an invoice or receive a payment.
- Opening Balance Equity: Your starting balance before you enter your company's assets and liabilities.
- Payroll Expense: Payroll items (expenses) for the company, including salaries, wages, bonuses, commissions, company contributions such as company paid health plans, and company paid portion of taxes such as Social Security and Medicare.
- Payroll Liabilities: Taxes you take from your employees' pay that you owe the government. These taxes include federal and state income taxes, local taxes, and the taxes paid by the employee like Medicare and Social Security.
- Retained Earnings: All profits from earlier periods that haven't yet been distributed to owners. At the beginning of the fiscal year, QuickBooks automatically transfers net income into your retained earnings account.
- Sales Tax Payable: Sales tax you collect and pay. You might not see this account if you haven’t turned on sales tax in QuickBooks.
- Uncategorized Expense: Money your business spends that needs to be categorized.
- Uncategorized Income: Money your business earned that needs to be categorized.
- Undeposited Funds (also called Payments to Deposit): Cash or checks that your business is ready to deposit at the bank.
- Inventory Asset: Your inventor’s current value. You might not see this if you haven’t turned on inventory tracking.
- Reconciliation Discrepancy: Reconciliation adjustments. This account is automatically created if you have a discrepancy in a reconciliation.
Related links
- Learn about account types and detail types in QuickBooks Online
- What are account registers in QuickBooks Online?
- Find, review, and edit transactions in account registers in QuickBooks Online
- Add an account to your chart of accounts in QuickBooks Online
- Make an account inactive on your chart of accounts in QuickBooks Online
- Use account numbers in your chart of accounts in QuickBooks Online
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