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A good, long-standing customer paid a $2,000 Invoice in full by credit card, and I recorded the payment. A few days later, they said they had meant to only pay $500 now and $1,500 later and asked to have $1,500 refunded, so I processed the refund.
To record this, I went back to the Invoice and clicked on Refund/Credit, which created a Credit Memo. I changed the amount on the Credit Memo from $2,000 to $1,500, selected “Use credit to give refund”, completed the credit card refund screen, and saved it.
The Credit Memo shows that $1,500 has been refunded.
Neither the Invoice nor the Credit Memo show up in Receive Payments.
I thought the balance due on the Invoice would be $1,500 but it is showing that it is paid in full.
My questions are:
1. What should I have done differently? I don’t see where it shows that the customer still owes us $1,500.
2. When they do pay the $1,500, how do I record and apply the payment?
3. What kind of documentation do I send the customer for their records?
Any specific step-by-step instructions would be most appreciated.
I am using Desktop Pro Plus 2019, Win 10, and credit card processing is not done through QB.
Solved! Go to Solution.
RE: When I try to change the amount of the payment from $2,000 to $500 it is telling me I need to delete the payment from the deposit. I could do that, but then the deposit wouldn't match the bank statement.
Here's what you have so far:
- Invoice $2000
- Actual Payment $2000, deposited.
And you then the customer requested a refund.
- So, enter a Credit memo for $1500
- and when prompted, a Credit Card Refund for $1500
Based on these transactions the customer account balance is now $0
But you want them to owe you $1500.
So, do one of two things:
- Either create a new invoice for $1500, exactly mirroring the $1500 credit memo (use the same item or items on it)
- Or delete/void the credit memo, but not the CC Refund.
Now the customer balance will be $1500, waiting for payment that you refunded.
A credit card refund functions like a Payment in reverse and will normally show up in Undeposited funds with your other payments, waiting to be deposited.
Since the credit memo is "paid" by the refund (the exact mirror image of an invoice being paid by a payment) neither will appear in receive payments; they complete each other.
The only remaining action in this case is to include the refund in the correct batch along with other credit cared payments received, or to "deposit" it by itself if that is what happens in your merchant account.
Thanks, I appreciate your help. I entered the deposit as you suggested.
The problem still remains that the invoice shows that it is paid in full. Is there some other place that would show they still owe us $1,500?
Right now, all I have to send them is an invoice that's marked paid and a credit memo that's marked refunded. I don't have anything that shows they owe $1,500.
Even an open balance report shows zero.
And then when I do get the payment, I'm not sure what to do with it since there doesn't seem to be anything that needs paid.
Am I thinking about this wrong? Like maybe it should be a customer loan or something like that?
Hi there, @kvioland.
I'd be happy to help share additional insight about recording the payment and refund in QuickBooks Desktop.
The following are the scenarios when to use a credit memo in QuickBooks:
In your case, there's an overpayment, and the customer wants to get their money back. To fix this, you can just use a refund check. I'm adding the following article for further reference: Record a credit memo or refund in QuickBooks Desktop.
Since you already issued a refund through the credit memo, you can delete the credit memo. Then, edit the payment and enter the correct amount you receive to change the invoice status to open.
Here's how:
After that, delete the bank deposit so that it'll not offset the customer payment. Once done, run the Customer QuickReport to see the balance on your invoice.
Here's how:
Please know that I'm just a post away if you have additional questions about this. I'll be happy to help you further. Have a great day ahead.
Thank you for helping, MaryGrace.
The original $2,000 payment was part of a deposit a few days earlier, which has already been recorded.
When I try to change the amount of the payment from $2,000 to $500 it is telling me I need to delete the payment from the deposit. I could do that, but then the deposit wouldn't match the bank statement.
Is there another way around this?
Hi there, @kvioland.
Thanks for getting back to this thread and trying the recommendation I provided in my previous post.
To make sure I'm on the same page, do you have a merchant account? If so, instead of editing the payment, let's just make sure the Accounts Receivable account is used in the check refund. This way, the deposit still matches your bank statement.
Here's how to check:
You may also want to indicate in the Memo section that this check is a refund to the customer's credit card payment. For more details about creating this, see this article right here: Record A Refund In QuickBooks Desktop.
That should get you back in track. You can always get back to this post or click the Reply button if you need clarifications. I'm also willing to answer your follow-up refund questions. Wishing you well.
RE: When I try to change the amount of the payment from $2,000 to $500 it is telling me I need to delete the payment from the deposit. I could do that, but then the deposit wouldn't match the bank statement.
Here's what you have so far:
- Invoice $2000
- Actual Payment $2000, deposited.
And you then the customer requested a refund.
- So, enter a Credit memo for $1500
- and when prompted, a Credit Card Refund for $1500
Based on these transactions the customer account balance is now $0
But you want them to owe you $1500.
So, do one of two things:
- Either create a new invoice for $1500, exactly mirroring the $1500 credit memo (use the same item or items on it)
- Or delete/void the credit memo, but not the CC Refund.
Now the customer balance will be $1500, waiting for payment that you refunded.
Thank you very much both @Anonymous and @MaryGraceS , everything looks perfect now.
You have both been very helpful and I appreciate the time you have taken to explain everything so well to me.
I have followed the instructions both of you have given me, and see that the methods you suggested all get the desired result of showing the customer still owes us and having something to apply their eventual payment to, as well as leaving a trail of exactly what happened.
I'd like to mark both as solutions to the problem, but don't know if I can.
Thank you again!
Thanks for getting back, @kvioland.
I'm glad you get all the help you need with applying customer credit card refund. I appreciate you sharing how the steps went.
You can cheer both BRC and Grace's answers, however, you can only mark 1 solution as the best answer. I'm sure they already appreciate your thoughts. :)
That said, if you need anything else or if you have other questions about credit card and refunds, please don't hesitate to visit the Community again. Have a great weekend.
I have the same situation but I am using QBO version and I can't follow your steps above. Is this answer for the desktop version?
Yes, this is for QB Desktop.
Thank you for joining into this thread, @FabianaT!
I can show you the steps in applying a customer credit card refund in your QuickBooks Online.
To start with, the Sales page shows all your transactions for your customers. With this, let's go to your customer's transaction list and edit the payment of your customer's invoice. Here's how:
From there, you can write a check as a refund for your customer. Let me show you how:
Now, here's how you can zero out the opening balance of your customer receiving the refund:
Once completed, I'm confident you can be able to issue a refund for your customer but still have the outstanding balance to be paid.
In addition, here's an article you can read to learn more about recording a refund for your customers: Record a Customer Refund.
Lastly, feel free to check this article for your future reference: Enter and Apply a Credit Memo or Delayed Credit.
Let me know in the comment section down below if you have any other concerns. It'll always be my pleasure to help.
I have a customer I need to refund the credit card payment only, the invoice is still payable.
Hi there, @HYPR.
Do you need to refund a payment you accepted with QuickBooks Payments? If the transaction hasn't settled yet, you have the option to void a payment. QuickBooks lets you know if you try to void a payment that's already settled.
If you'll want to refund a credit card, QuickBooks takes care of the processing. Here's how:
You can check out our guide on voiding and refunding customer payments in QuickBooks Desktop for your convenience.
On the other hand, if you're not using QuickBooks Payments to process your customer payments, check out this link for more info: Give your customer a credit or refund in QuickBooks Desktop for Windows.
Please let me know if you need further assistance. I'm always around to help.
I have several vendor credits to apply for returned goods. The original vendor bills have already been paid. We will not receive any cash/credit for the returns only a credit notes. We now have a credit with the vendor and I already posted as credit invoice but how do I apply the credit payment and reflect to bank feed and see on bank reconciliation.
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