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I am trying to enter all our inventory since 2012. Still rather new and shaky to it all.
When entering freight cost, I was dividing up the cost into each part and being done. The owner does not want it done like that. He would like to be able to see a report of how much the item cost without having the freight in the cost of the item as well. How can I add the freight in as a line item?
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Regardless of what the owner wants, the IRS is specific, the cost of inventory it all costs to get it on hand and ready for sales. inbound shipping, taxes, customs, etc etc
but if he insists, create an expense account called inbound shipping and use a non inventory item named for that on the bill, enter the amount.
Regardless of what the owner wants, the IRS is specific, the cost of inventory it all costs to get it on hand and ready for sales. inbound shipping, taxes, customs, etc etc
but if he insists, create an expense account called inbound shipping and use a non inventory item named for that on the bill, enter the amount.
Ok, so what about what when you purchase inventory and have it shipped through a third party. it wouldn't be included on the invoice. How do you handle that?
Landed costs require a work around
You enter the inventory with bill to stock it
when you get third party shipping or customs or whatever, you pay that bill using a clearing expense account
then you edit the bill that stocked the items, add a portion of the landed cost to each item total, and then chnage to the account part of the transaction, select the clearing expense account and enter the amount as a negative number. The bill amount will not change if you did the math right, save and click though any warnings about payments being applied
QB will revisit the the stock transaction and adjust item average cost, and if you sold some in between the bills, QB will adjust COGS as well.
Is this the same requirement for items that are not part of inventory? For instance, we are an audio integrator business, so we purchase gear for our use and possibly for the use of doing gigs/rentals. When we purchase gear or related items, we are charged for the items and a separate charge for shipping. I can not figure out how to account for that shipping charge if we're not selling the gear and it's not part of inventory for sale. It would be great if someone came up with a "shipping chart" for all the different ways to account for shipping.
@Notalemming wrote:Is this the same requirement for items that are not part of inventory? For instance, we are an audio integrator business, so we purchase gear for our use and possibly for the use of doing gigs/rentals. When we purchase gear or related items, we are charged for the items and a separate charge for shipping. I can not figure out how to account for that shipping charge if we're not selling the gear and it's not part of inventory for sale. It would be great if someone came up with a "shipping chart" for all the different ways to account for shipping.
When you purchase for the business or the job, all costs are posted, they do not have to be split out.
If you buy a reel of cable locally for $55 including tax, that is the amount of the expense. If you order a reel of cable for $25, plus $10 for shipping, then $35 is the expense
What you paid total, including inbound shipping and Sales taxes, is your Cost in the US for what you bought.
If you bought a Mixer board or PA system that is expensive enough to fall under the Fixed Asset regulations, that still is All Costs as Fixed Asset basis. You don't split it out.
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