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Hello QB Community - I need help please!! QBO
It's going to be a long text, I hope I can make it understandable:
We are an automotive repair shop:
So customer comes in, we order part A at parts supplier, repair the vehicle (time and part A), write a bill, bill payment - straight forward - all good.
So now after a week customer comes back saying part A is faulty!
We order new part B , repair vehicle (time and part B) - THAT'S WHERE MY PROBLEM STARTS!
I created an expense account for warranty claims.
I need to track time and parts somehow, so I billed it out to customer and gave him a credit note OR
I billed it out in regular invoice and than add lines to set same labor time and part in negative. using my warranty claims account.
We have a warranty contract with our supplier, so we get the part replaced for free if faulty and a reduced labor amount for the replacement time of the part. That means I have to bill the time spent to replace the part to our parts supplier for the warranty contract.
The problem is, that the supplier is not paying us the labor, he is giving us supplier credits used against the parts we buy daily. So at the end of the month I am using all the credits against our balance owing.
No matter how I do it, somehow it seems I double up everything, my expense account doesn't balance or seem right.
PLEASE HELP!
Thank you
Hello there, @sabinefriesen.
When you return the faulty item to a vendor, you can create a vendor credit with the same amount cost of the item part. In this case, create a new bill for the vendor and apply the credit amount. I'll guide you how:
Step 1: Create a vendor credit
Step 2: Create a bill
Step 3: Apply the vendor credit and bill to expense
You can also visit this article to learn how to run a report with vendor totals: Run a report with vendor totals.
Feel free to drop a comment if you have additional questions. I'll be glad to assist you.
Thank you Maybelle, but that does not fix my problem!
I'm here to get through in entering your expenses, sabinefriesen.
The expenses doubles is caused when you create another bill and bill payments every time there is a replacement. You'll have to only create another bill for the time spent to replace the part to our suppliers. From there, we can apply the supplier credit to the existing bill.
Let me show you how to link the credit to the bill:
I also suggest reaching out to an accountant so they can help you manage in recording warranty claims that suits your business preference.
Feel free to get back to me if you need anything else. You take care always!
I have no idea what you mean when you say that your expense account does not balance out right?
For the new part
1. charge the customer on an invoice for time and then issue the customer credit using your warranty expense account. When I do this I add a W- to the start of the invoice to make it easy to identify.
2. return the bad part to the vendor with the time totals and enter a credit at that time
3. the vendor will issue a credit, adjust that credit in QBO to match the vendor numbers and use other income as the account for the credit.
then when you order in the future, you use that credit to pay for your orders
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