Turn on suggestions
Auto-suggest helps you quickly narrow down your search results by suggesting possible matches as you type.
Showing results for
Get 50% OFF QuickBooks for 3 months*
Buy nowHello,
So please forgive me if I am bad at explaining this/what I need. I tried calling Quickbooks Online and the solution they had basically put me back to where I started, so they were no help.
Daily, I run the A/R Aging Detail for our company. I use this report to record outstanding amounts from customers (I put these on an external report I created.) I have one overpayment from a customer from March of 2022 and 2 overpayments from customers for sales tax (Also recorded in 2022 - we overcharged the sales tax and credited them the difference of what they paid versus what we should have originally charged.) I am trying to clean up these balances from a prior employee. I need to add the credit for these amounts to the customers accounts while also taking them off the A/R aging detail sheet. Some of these customers don't have their future invoices produced yet, so I don't/can't apply these credits to their future invoices and having the credit memo just sitting in their accounts adds them to the AR aging detail and AR aging summary reports which results in a misleading total of outstanding invoices. (Yes I know I can filter out these negative amounts or whatnot, but that is not what I need/want to do.)
I was trying to create a delayed credit for the credit amounts and add them under the original 2022 dates and then void the original credit memos. When I did this for the sales tax ones, it took the amounts off my AR aging detail report, but I noticed my voided transactions were under sales tax and the new delayed credit wasn't, therefore it changed the 2022 numbers we reported.
Does anyone understand what I am trying to do and can help? I need to be able to keep the numbers we reported in 2022 the same, while also being able to keep these credits on the customers accounts and not show up in my AR aging detail. If they stay on the AR aging detail, they could be on there forever considering some customers only get invoiced every 2 years.
Please help! Let me know if you have anymore questions or need more clarification.
Thank you all for your help
I appreciate you laying out the details of your concern, @H_Morrow310.
Let me further assist you by pointing you in the right direction of support to help sort out your issue with handling your customer's overpayments and credits.
I understand you've already contacted our support, but I recommend contacting them again. They have the tools to have a screen-sharing session with you in a safe environment and further investigate your issue.
Here's how you can reach out to them:
You can check their support hours from this article so they can address your concerns promptly.
Click the Reply button if you need more help with any QuickBooks-related concerns. Take care and have a pleasant day.
I need to add the credit for these amounts to the customers accounts while also taking them off the A/R aging detail sheet.
That's the problem and, honestly, a shortcoming of QBO. Those amounts should be able to be listed as liabilities, not as a reduction in A/R (both of which are credit balances) and show as a credit on a customer's account. The problem is that QBO uses A/R exclusively for customer accounts, so you can't have a credit on the customer's account and not have it show on the A/R aging/detail reports. You can move those amounts out of A/R and into liability accounts but that eliminates QBO's ability to apply those credits to future invoices automatically. Therefore, you will need to remember that those credits are available and then apply them manually.
I read your post and have a similar question. I am fairly new to our company and discovered they had 3% Rebate program last year. They issued credit memos for each rebate - which shows up on the A/R report. I wanted to see if you would share what process you used to move the credits off AR.
Thank you
Let me help you move your credits, Cybersis4u.
We can create a rebate income account to move the credits off your accounts receivable. I recommend contacting your accountant to ensure the accuracy of books and for guidance in taking the process. If you don't have one, you can find a professional through this link: https://quickbooks.intuit.com/find-an-accountant/.
To proceed, here's the steps to create an account:
Next, we can create a rebate item in the product and services tab. Select the Service type and choose the Rebate Income Account we've created. Once done, create an invoice and use the rebate item.
Lastly, link the invoices and credit memo by creating a receive payment.
Additionally, you can generate a report of your accounts receivable aging detail, and customize it to display specific accounts or customers.
I'm still all ears if you need further assistance managing your credit memo and accounts receivable. Just tap the reply button below for your response.
Thank you for responding back so quickly, but this did not solve my issue, by creating an invoice - it puts it back into AR - where I don't want it.
I am very interested in hearing from @Rainflurry - as his post sounded more like what I was thinking:
His comment: You can move those amounts out of A/R and into liability accounts but that eliminates QBO's ability to apply those credits to future invoices automatically. Therefore, you will need to remember that those credits are available and then apply them manually. .
I need to get the existing credits off the A/R Aging report. I have created an Excel spreadsheet to monitor the credits - as the credit is only good for 1 year - and will be voided if not used. Having a Liability account sounds like what I need - but just want to be sure I have created the proper Chart of Accounts and Item list. I have been given so many 'instructions' how to do this - but each one so far has resulted in the amount showing up on the A/R.
"I need to get the existing credits off the A/R Aging report. I have created an Excel spreadsheet to monitor the credits - as the credit is only good for 1 year - and will be voided if not used. Having a Liability account sounds like what I need - but just want to be sure I have created the proper Chart of Accounts and Item list. I have been given so many 'instructions' how to do this - but each one so far has resulted in the amount showing up on the A/R."
To get the credits off the A/R aging report, create a journal entry: debit A/R and credit the liability account. You can make one journal entry that contains an A/R debit for each customer. You need to include the customer under the NAME column on the journal entry. That moved the A/R balance to the liability account but you still need to apply the A/R debit to the A/R credit to get them off the A/R Aging report. Go to 'Receive payment' and apply the rebate you entered under 'Credits' to the journal entry that moved that to the liability account under 'Outstanding Transactions'. You will need to do that for each customer. Your A/R Aging Report should no longer show the rebates and your liability account should have the total of rebates.
If you want to apply the rebate to a future customer invoice, you have a couple of options: 1) You can move the rebate from the liability account to an A/R credit for that customer (debit liability account, credit A/R) and then apply the credit when you Receive payment or, 2) create a service item called "Rebate" and choose the rebate liability account under 'Income account'. Then, add that item to the invoice as a negative amount. That will reduce the amount due on the invoice as well as the liability account. I think that looks better from the customer's perspective because there is a separate line item on the invoice showing the rebate was applied. Hope that helps.
@Rainflurry. Thank you. Hope this works.
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