Turn on suggestions
Auto-suggest helps you quickly narrow down your search results by suggesting possible matches as you type.
Showing results for
I have an invoice and the payment was received (from the invoice I click "Receive Payments" and apply payment to that invoice). I deposit everything in to "undeposited funds" because I use PayPal for credit card processing. So I have to go to the deposits and subtract the PayPal fee for each transaction before it is deposited in the PayPal account. We then needed to give a refund to the customer because the item was not in stock. Then 3 days later we need to receive payment again.
After payment is received and I then do a "refund/credit", 1) the items from the invoice are all returned to inventory and 2) there is no open invoice to collect payment on.
Is the only way to handle this is to create a second invoice? I would rather not do that (for other reasons) if there is another way. Thank you.
Thanks for the detailed information, elsalty.
Based on the details above, here are the transaction that were recorded in QuickBooks Desktop.
Now, your customer paid again the same amount. However, the invoice is already closed.
You'll have to create another invoice and pay it with exact amount you received from the customer. If creating an invoice is not an option, you can create a sales receipt instead.
You might also want to consult your accountant on what's the best transaction to create in this situation. They know what's best for you and your books.
Feel free to get back to us if you need anything else. Have a great day!
I ended up using a different method based on another post I read that was a somewhat similar situation to mine:
1. Collect the pay on the invoice as I normally would.
2. For the refund, I wrote a check to the customer for the amount of the invoice using the accounts receivable account.
3. Then I "collected payment" on the check that was written which.
So essentially the customer paid money, I sent the money back to them, then they paid again when I collected payment). I am not sure if this is the best way to handle it, but it prevents having a second invoice in QB which our website would not have a record of. Our website only would have the original invoice that was paid, then a refund, then was paid again.
Hello there, @elsalty.
You can create a service item for your document fees or tag fees to record your sales. Let me walk you through how.
Once done you can initiate a refund to your customer to return the funds to her. You'll just need to create a Credit Memo to the amount you want to return.
Here's how:
Once done refund initiated it will be shown in Credit Memo Refunded once successful.
For additional information on this, I recommend the following article: Give your customer a credit or refund in QuickBooks Desktop for Windows.
Please don't hesitate to let me know if you should have any questions about this or anything else QuickBooks related. Take care.
Thanks for the response. But is the way I did it bad for some reason?
Thanks for coming back here, elsalty.
The best way to handle this situation is to record a return by creating a credit memo/refund first. Although writing a check to refund a customer is part of the step, you will need the credit memo to track the sale, return, and refund correctly in QuickBooks.
You can read this article for the step by step process: Give your customer a credit or refund in QuickBooks Desktop for Windows.
Here's also a sample screenshot of what the refund check looks like:
I'm here to help if you have any follow-up questions about customer refunds or other concerns with QuickBooks Desktop. Thanks.
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