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hmanzano
Level 1

Payments between sister companies

Hello,

 

I own two companies (LLC) with separate books. Most of the time I have to use the employees from company A to help company B. Basically, subcontracting each other. I want company B to start paying back company A for this labor. How do I record this payment to company A? I was thinking on invoicing the other company but then it will show as revenue and I'm not sure if it is really a revenue for company A.

 

Please help.

 

P.S. I already have my due/to liability accounts for shared expenses and inter-company loans.

4 Comments 4
Rustler
Level 15

Payments between sister companies


@hmanzano wrote:

Hello,

 

I own two companies (LLC) with separate books. Most of the time I have to use the employees from company A to help company B. Basically, subcontracting each other. I want company B to start paying back company A for this labor. How do I record this payment to company A? I was thinking on invoicing the other company but then it will show as revenue and I'm not sure if it is really a revenue for company A.

 

Please help.

 

P.S. I already have my due/to liability accounts for shared expenses and inter-company loans.


so you want to have some portion of payroll expense, paid for by the other company.

 

Yes it is income, create a service item for that linked to the income of your choice (I would create one called something like payroll payback).  Use that item on an invoice to the other company.

 

On the P&L, income is reduced by expense, so the added payroll payback income will be offset by a portion of payroll expense.

 

ie.

Payroll payback = 12K

Payroll expense = 25K

 

actual expense that affect net profit and loss is 13K

qbteachmt
Level 15

Payments between sister companies

It is Not Payroll Expense, if these people are not employed by the entity. What you described is called Worker Misclassification. You need to meet with your own CPA, before you get audited by the Feds, your State, your general insurer, and Worker Comp.

 

Here's what you described: I've got one entity absorbing costs for the Sales that are not theirs from the benefit of this labor. That's your "lending" entity, so the Taxes and Business reporting is wrong for this entity = labor costs are Overstated against its own Sales. I have another entity that benefits from Labor but never Hired these people, and they also are not independent subcontractors; I simply borrow them from my own other company, and that other company has the Employee and Payroll relationship and fiduciary responsibilities and employment-related issues. And now you want the One to pay the Other, but you are not a Contract Labor organization providing workers, such as a Temp Placement agency.

 

None of this is right; it's not right for any of the accounting.

 

What you likely really have is: All the people that work for Company A also are employees of Company B; I assign them to who they are working for and run the two businesses Separately and appropriately to these relationships.

Anibeth
Level 1

Payments between sister companies

Hello, I was wondering if you where able  to resolve this ? if yes , How? I have the same situation.

Kendra H
QuickBooks Team

Payments between sister companies

Hello there, @Anibeth

 

Thanks for joining this thread. I'd be glad to provide information about payments between sister companies. 

 

At this time, QuickBooks Online doesn't offer an option to have payments between sister companies. I can see how that feature would be beneficial for you and your business. That being said, I'll be sending feedback to our Product Development Team based on this interaction. 

 

Product updates are the result of comments provided by users. You can also submit feedback on your end as well. That way, our engineers will receive multiple suggestions on helpful this would be. To submit feedback, go to the Gear icon, then choose Feedback

 

However, to check out what's new about the product, you can refer to this article: QuickBooks Blog.

 

If you have any more questions or concerns, please don't hesitate to comment below. I'm always here to help. Take care.

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