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I work at a company that has 50/50 owners and they own their own separate businesses. They make items for us that we sell on our website. They send us items on consignment so we don't pay for them until they actually sell. We have all of their invoices entered into QuickBooks though and so the P&L obviously looks insanely off. Prior years we apparently didn't enter the invoices until we were going to pay. The previous GM wanted to better keep track of payables to he entered them this year.
Is there a way for me to separate these invoices from the other payables to that the P&L doesn't look wildly off with stuff we haven't paid and don't have to pay yet?
Thanks for reaching out to us, cquigs717.
Yes, there is. You can create a purchase order (PO) and convert it to a bill, expense, or check once you're ready to pay for the items you've sold. Since the purchase order is a non-posting transaction, it will not affect the Profit & Loss report.
If you haven't already, turn on the purchase order feature: I'll show you how.
Here's how to create a purchase order:
Add or covert the PO to expense, bill, or check once you're ready to pay it so it will reflect in the Profit & Loss report. Refer to this article for a complete guide: Add purchase orders to expenses, bills, or checks in QuickBooks Online.
Furthermore, you can follow the steps below to improve the process of handling consignment in QuickBooks Online.
You can use this resource for a more comprehensive guide: How to record consignment sales.
In addition, I've included the following link to assist you in personalizing your report to show only the information you require: Customize reports in QuickBooks Online.
Let me know if you need anything else. I'll be around to help you.
"We have all of their invoices entered into QuickBooks though and so the P&L obviously looks insanely off." Your P&L should not be affected by bills for inventory, only your balance sheet, and that's only for non-consignment inventory. Since you do not own the consignment inventory (the consignor does), only the consignor can have the inventory on their balance sheet - two taxpayers cannot claim the same inventory. It sounds like you're aware that there are no payables to track with consignment inventory until AFTER it has sold.
The proper way to deal with consignment inventory is to track it outside of QB. Alternatively, if you want to see the volume of inventory in QBO, you can create a journal entry whenever you get consignment inventory: debit consignment inventory, credit inventory asset. This will show your consignment inventory total with a corresponding negative total for your inventory asset account so they net to zero and have no net effect on your balance sheet. Again, since you do not own the inventory, from an accounting standpoint, you do not want consignment inventory to have any effect on your financial statements until after it has sold.
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