Turn on suggestions
Auto-suggest helps you quickly narrow down your search results by suggesting possible matches as you type.
Showing results for
Solved! Go to Solution.
"We have a vendor that sent us an invoice in October that did not have an amount due but instead was a credit for $137.82. We put an invoice in our system for this vendor as a customer."
You should delete the invoice and enter a vendor credit memo for $137.82 if you can. If October is closed and you can't make an entry, then make a journal entry in December: debit A/P and credit A/R and list the customer/vendor under 'Name'. You now have the A/P credit that can be applied to the new bill to reduce the amount due. Don't forget to apply the A/R credit from the journal entry to the invoice you created. Go to New > Receive payment and you will see the invoice and the credit from the journal entry. Apply the credit to the invoice to close them out.
Your response of "Then, receive payment on the customer invoice for $137.82 and deposit that to the newly-created Clearing Account." is a cut and paste of my post. It's incredibly sad that you need to plagiarize my posts and then take credit for it by marking the thread solved with your "answer". Myself and other community members help users on this forum on our free time. You are getting paid to help them. If you have something to add, that's fine, but don't take credit for other users work.
Good day, @Vduff.
I can suggest a way and technical input to record what your supplier owes and your bill payment in QuickBooks Online (QBO). Just a heads up, it's best to refer to an accountant before performing the following steps below to ensure you have an accurate financial record.
First, you can create two separate checks and choose the appropriate accounts to where the checks go. Here's how:
Next, match the two checks with the downloaded transaction. Should there be an excess in your matching process, toggle on Resolve, choose the vendor and income account, and enter the excess as a negative amount. I suggest running a Profit and loss report after this to ensure everything is correct.
When this works for your situation, let me add this article as a reference in your reconciliation process: Reconcile an account in QuickBooks Online.
If you have follow-up questions or other QBO-related concerns, feel free to leave us a reply below. We're always here to assist. Take care.
The easiest way to do this is to use a bank Clearing Account to offset the invoice (A/R) with the bill (A/P). First, create a bank account in QB called 'Clearing Account'. Then, receive payment on the customer invoice for $137.82 and deposit that to the newly-created Clearing Account. Then pay down the vendor's bill by $137.82 out of the Clearing Account. That will zero out the Clearing Account and leave $2,578.39 due on the bill. Pay that with your regular bank account and you're all set.
I don't follow @AlverMarkT 's advice. It doesn't make any sense to me to write two checks.
So I am not writing two checks. Let me see if I can clarify:
We have a vendor that sent us an invoice in October that did not have an amount due but instead was a credit for $137.82. We put an invoice in our system for this vendor as a customer. Normally when this happens they send an ACH however they did not and we receive payment. Instead they sent our November invoice of $2716.21 with a credit of $137.82 so the total I paid via ACH was $2,578.39.
I need to understand how to receive payment on the invoice for $137.82 and then also show our payment of $2578.39.
I cannot combine the transactions they must show separately.
So I am not writing two checks. Let me see if I can clarify:
We have a vendor that sent us an invoice in October that did not have an amount due but instead was a credit for $137.82. We put an invoice in our system for this vendor as a customer. Normally when this happens they send an ACH however they did not and we receive payment. Instead they sent our November invoice of $2716.21 with a credit of $137.82 so the total I paid via ACH was $2,578.39.
I need to understand how to receive payment on the invoice for $137.82 and then also show our payment of $2578.39.
I cannot combine the transactions they must show separately.
So I am not writing two checks. Let me see if I can clarify:
We have a vendor that sent us an invoice in October that did not have an amount due but instead was a credit for $137.82. We put an invoice in our system for this vendor as a customer. Normally when this happens they send an ACH however they did not and we receive payment. Instead they sent our November invoice of $2716.21 with a credit of $137.82 so the total I paid via ACH was $2,578.39.
I need to understand how to receive payment on the invoice for $137.82 and then also show our payment of $2578.39.
I cannot combine the transactions they must show separately.
Let's make sure you'll be able to record your transactions accurately, Vduff.
What @Rainflurry mentioned above is the correct way how to record your transactions. You can create a clearing account so you can deposit the amount after you have received the $137.82 payment. To create a clearing account, follow the steps below:
Then, receive payment on the customer invoice for $137.82 and deposit that to the newly-created Clearing Account.
Once done, open the $2,716.21 bill, then pay the bill using the clearing account with the amount of 137.82. I've added a screenshot for your reference:
Then, pay bills again using the business bank account with the remaining balance which is $2578.39.
Furthermore, after QuickBooks downloads the latest transactions, learn how you can add and categorize them in QuickBooks Online (QBO). I've added this article for more details: Categorize Online Bank Transactions In QuickBooks Online.
You can always get back to us if you have any other concerns when recording transactions. Remember, the Community is always here to cover all your concerns anytime. Have a great new year to you!
"We have a vendor that sent us an invoice in October that did not have an amount due but instead was a credit for $137.82. We put an invoice in our system for this vendor as a customer."
You should delete the invoice and enter a vendor credit memo for $137.82 if you can. If October is closed and you can't make an entry, then make a journal entry in December: debit A/P and credit A/R and list the customer/vendor under 'Name'. You now have the A/P credit that can be applied to the new bill to reduce the amount due. Don't forget to apply the A/R credit from the journal entry to the invoice you created. Go to New > Receive payment and you will see the invoice and the credit from the journal entry. Apply the credit to the invoice to close them out.
Your response of "Then, receive payment on the customer invoice for $137.82 and deposit that to the newly-created Clearing Account." is a cut and paste of my post. It's incredibly sad that you need to plagiarize my posts and then take credit for it by marking the thread solved with your "answer". Myself and other community members help users on this forum on our free time. You are getting paid to help them. If you have something to add, that's fine, but don't take credit for other users work.
You have clicked a link to a site outside of the QuickBooks or ProFile Communities. By clicking "Continue", you will leave the community and be taken to that site instead.
For more information visit our Security Center or to report suspicious websites you can contact us here