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I need to void a few checks in prior months (checks have been lost). How do I do this without affecting the prior months financial statements. What journal entries need to be made?
Also, what if an invoice and check in a prior month need to be deleted. How can that be done?
Would appreciate any help. Thank you.
Solved! Go to Solution.
In order to void invoices from the prior closed period, you may want to create customer 'credit memo' and then apply credit memo against the outstanding invoice.
Refer to these articles that deal with how to void checks without affecting a prior period
http://www.hhcpa.com/blogs/government/two-helpful-quickbooks-tips-to-protect-prior-period-data/
In order to void invoices from the prior closed period, you may want to create customer 'credit memo' and then apply credit memo against the outstanding invoice.
Refer to these articles that deal with how to void checks without affecting a prior period
http://www.hhcpa.com/blogs/government/two-helpful-quickbooks-tips-to-protect-prior-period-data/
"(checks have been lost)."
But you issued them, so delete is not proper. Void also changes your financial reports, and you did incur those costs. This is a Banking issue, not backing out Expense.
If you intend to reissue them, the make a deposit with the current date for the total, posting to an Other Liability account. Make replacement checks in the current date and pay out that liability.
The deposit for the total, and the uncashed checks, all clear against each other the next reconciliation to net of 0. The new checks will then clear, and this is not new expense.
Can you give some more detail please?
I have a vendor that never cashed a check from 2017. I owe that vendor $126 because the check has never cleared. I don't understand how this will help clear the check that was never cashed. Are you clearing the old check against the deposit? And then the deposit expense is washing out the new check's expense?
What if you don't intend to reissue them?
I'm in a scenario where checks have been lost; however, the original vendor wrote them off in their year-end financials and does not want a reissued check (essentially, forgiving the debt). So, I need to "clear" or "cancel" the original checks and their corresponding expenses in my current accounting period without affecting the previous accounting period (in which the original transactions took place).
How does that get done?
Great to see you here in the Community, @HYE Consulting,
Allow me to jump into this conversation.
@qbteachmt's answer above perfectly fits your scenario. You will no longer need to delete or void the lost check from the register to offset a lost check. Doing this will only affect your past financial records.
The best way to get past this is to add a deposit, dated currently, as a reversal entry of the expense transaction. This functions as a refund on your books since the vendor already wrote off the check.
That should get you right back on track, @HYE Consulting.
Please feel free to get in touch with me if you need further assistance. You got me here to sort things out for you. Have a great day!
Forgiven debt means you never incurred that expense. You make deposit to offset the checks, either as the same expense you thought you paid for; or as income. Example:
It is in this fiscal year, you thought you paid for Supplies, they don't want the check replaced, so you make a deposit entry and this split line is "from" Supplies expense.
The next line, this is the offset for something you posted in the Prior fiscal year as expense, so that is Income in this current fiscal year.
= total offset for all uncashed checks.
Thanks so much for the guidance. I have a follow up question. How do you address the outstanding checks continuing to appear on the bank reconciliation into the future??
Greetings, ghedding.
I’m happy to see you joining in on this thread. Helping out in keeping your financial records in order is what I aim for.
If you don’t want to reissue the check, the answer provided by @qbteachmt will help correct your records. If the check is from the previous month and hasn’t’ cleared yet, the transaction will still show on the list of outstanding checks.
You’ll have to clear the transaction to ensure the reconciliation process shows a correct opening balance. To resolve this, create a clearing account.
Here’s how:
For more information about setting up a clearing account, check out this article: Clearing account.
Now, let's input the check. I'll walk you through the steps:
Once done, you can start reconciling the account. You'll find the detailed instructions in this article: Reconcile in QuickBooks Desktop.
Reach out to me directly if you have additional questions about the process. I'll be around to assist you further. Have a great rest of your day.
If you have an Uncashed Check to Replace, the "offset deposit" is to a Liability account, so that you can pay out that liability on a new (replacement) check.
If you have an Uncashed Check that also is not being replaced, your offset deposit is going to be where you list what you want to reverse, such as Office Supplies expense wasn't incurred, after all.
In both examples, the Uncashed Check and that offsetting Deposit are both Marked as cleared in the next reconciliation. They net to 0, so no impact on that reconciliation ending balance.
I have a check from a prior period that we reversed in the current period via a journal entry. I credited my payable and debited my cash. Net $0 and my vendor balance is correct that I owe that vendor again. I wont' be reissuing this check until the end of the month. However, now a payable shows up on my cash basis balance sheet and that's not correct. How do I fix that?
Hi there, Pitch5.
Were you able to date the reversal journal entry same as the original check? If not, this could be the reason why you’re seeing a payable on your balance sheet. You’ll need to locate and edit the journal entry to correct the information.
Please let me know if you require further assistance with this issue or know if you have other concerns that I can help you with QuickBooks.
How does posting the new check to the clearing account help in getting the original check off of the reconciliation for the bank account?
Hello, @ebonorden.
Allow me to step in and help share additional information about posting the new check to the clearing account.
The clearing account is only a temporary account to hold the money when you can't move it directly. This account should be zeroed out since you'll always take out the same amount that you put in.
It may correct the reconciliation but you'll need to transfer it to another account to ensure your accounts are balanced.
If you need help with anything or if you have additional questions about clearing account, please don't hesitate to reach out again. I'm always here to help.
We voided a February Bill-Payment Check following the Help instructions in Quickbooks. It didn't help. How can I correct February and reissue a check in the current month. What would the correcting journal entries be?
Hello there, @PrismEd.
Let me help share some insights about the bill transaction in QuickBooks Desktop.
Once you void a bill payment check, it will cause the bill paid to return to unpaid status. You can process another payment to marked the bill as paid.
However, if the amount for the initial bill was withdrawn and deposited back to your account, you'll need to record a bank deposit in QuickBooks. Once done, create another bill and record the payment to mark it as closed.
To record a bank deposit, here's how:
If you need further assistance with the steps, I recommend to contact our QuickBooks Desktop Support Team. They have additional tools to pull up your account and do a remote session.
Here's how to contact our customer support:
That should do it! Fill me in if you have additional questions about the bill transaction. I'll be around to help you out. Have a good one.
I void a check last month I have been told it was lost. that month was reconciled when I void it QB automatically adjust it for me. When I received the next month statement it shows they cashed the check and it cleared from the bank. How do I fix that I am off that check amount exactly to reconcile. How can I recreate the check that was voided? or any other way?
We can recreate it, Year2020.
That way, it will be recorded again and be part of your next month's reconciliation. Simply go to Banking menu and select Write Checks. Fill out the details, then Save & Close. Make sure that the amount is the same with the voided one.
You can read this guide about reconciliation. This article will walk you through the process on how to properly reconcile your accounts.
Reply again if you have more questions. Wishing you a continues success.
Thank you for your quick help. Can I ask if you can explain it more for me. Recreating void check means writing a new check totally and reconcile it with current months? Or do I have to use same check No (enforce QB) to use the same no with the voided one and same date beside same amount?
Thank you,
I'm glad to see you again, Year2020.
When you void a check, the original entry will still appear in your Activity by Account report, and any transactions that are reversed will also show a status of “Void or Cleared."
You have the option to use the same information when re-creating the check. This transaction will show when you reconcile the account for the current month.
Here's an article to help guide you more in re-creating and modifying the check: Create, modify, and print checks. Also. for some "How do I" steps in QuickBooks Desktop, you can always visit our Help Articles page for reference.
I want to make sure your concern is fully addressed and I'm here to provide further assistance whenever you need it. Have a great rest of the week!
Most software packages let you void a prior period check in the current period.
Quickbooks should add this feature.
Does the deposit fix reduce 1099 amounts?
Appreciate that, @StanG.
A bank deposit does not reduce the amount of your 1099 payments since it is posted directly into your bank account. You can read through this article to learn more about bank deposits: Record and make Bank Deposits in QuickBooks Desktop.
Lastly, here's a few articles you can read to help manage your account and related tasks: Help Articles for QuickBooks Desktop.
If there's anything else that I can help you with, let me know in the comments. I'll be here to lend a hand.
My issue is that we should be able to void a check written in a prior period and have the general ledger updated in the current period.
If a check is voided it should show void in the software.
No work-around.
I am going to void the check.
Make a journal entry in the prior month to reverse the journal entry made by voiding the check.
Make a journal entry in the current month to reverse the check.
I have to agree with this. QB is the only accounting system I have ever worked with that you cannot void a check in the current date or whatever date you choose. I'm not a software expert by any means, but this seems to me it should be a fairly easy fix.
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