Turn on suggestions
Auto-suggest helps you quickly narrow down your search results by suggesting possible matches as you type.
Showing results for
I am using QuickBooks to track HOA payments and pay bills. I do not send out invoices. When I enter deposits, it makes me assign an account from which it is being paid--Accounts Receivable is the only obvious choice. The deposit shows up as a negative amount in each customer file, and also as a negative in Accounts Receivable. I think this is because I am not issuing invoices. How can I correct this? I would like to eliminate Accounts Receivable altogether but it won't let me. Thanks.
You need a sales transaction assigned to the customer/job. Use an item on a sales receipt/invoice to record your income then make deposits.
Hello, Were you able to figure out how to record the monthly HOA payments? I am using Quickbooks online for the same thing. I wanted to set up one receivable account for the total to collect monthly for all 180 units. The residents are paying via ACH and check deposits. Once I figure out how to set up a monthly receivable, I am hoping to offset this with the ACH deposits and check deposits. My issue is that these are all in batches - is this possible? For example, the total HOA monthly receivable is $200K, throughout the month there are several ACH payments that come in, let's say one for $120K and one for $20K, and then "batches" of check deposits, for the example, we can say $10K is one and $10K is the other. How would I record these? My intention is that this receivable account would then show how much has been unpaid for the month? Please send suggestions of proper flow through Quickbooks online. Thank you!!
"I wanted to set up one receivable account"
Yes, this is All you need and this is All you can use in QB Online.
"for the total to collect monthly for all 180 units."
That's the Dues Service item, which is linked to your income account, listed on Invoice per Owner Name.
"The residents are paying via ACH and check deposits. Once I figure out how to set up a monthly receivable,"
It's One Invoice per Name, monthly.
"I am hoping to offset this with the ACH deposits and check deposits."
It's not Offset. You use Receive Payment, or for the ACH, you will assign this is Not a Deposit, but comprised of individual Payments by Name. You need to process the funds arriving as payments by Name, to show which amount applies to which open and unpaid invoice by that same name.
"My issue is that these are all in batches - is this possible?"
Yes; you assign it to Open Invoices, and allocate it by name.
"For example, the total HOA monthly receivable is $200K, throughout the month there are several ACH payments that come in, let's say one for $120K and one for $20K,"
You assign the Payments by Name.
"and then "batches" of check deposits"
You process the payments for the date you got those checks and make sure they go to Undeposited Funds, a Holding account in QB. You make the deposit selecting the transactions sitting in UF are part of this Batched deposit for that date. Now you have one Banking entry, which matches the fat envelope you took to the bank, for the date you went to the bank, which might b a date or two After the mail arrived with the checks. You get to date the checks for the Payment date, and the Banking for the Banking date.
"My intention is that this receivable account would then show how much has been unpaid for the month?"
AR management shows all Unpaid amounts. You run the AR Aging reports to see them Aging = by due date, so if someone didn't pay for 2 months, that also shows.
" Please send suggestions of proper flow through Quickbooks online."
It's the normal process of Unpaid sales = Invoice, then processing that the funds arrived and should show they apply to one of the unpaid invoices.
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