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Our church collects funds on a weekly basis that we pass on to various partner organizations on a periodic basis. Typically the funds we collect in one month are dispersed to our partner organizations the month following receipt. Sometimes the amounts collected for certain partners is held for several months before the actual dispersal takes place. I think I need to show the amounts collected on our balance sheet as both a current liability and as income in the proper checking account. Making the bank deposit in the banking menu to show them as income is not the issue, but rather how to show certain dollars within those bank accounts are also liabilities is the problem.
We use Quickbooks Pro Desktop version and I use the write checks functions in the banking menu when making payments from our various checking accounts or us the transfer function when moving funds from one bank account to another. I don't typically enter each invoice as it comes in within the vendors menu, and rarely if ever do I use the pay bills function.
How do I do this? Step by step please.
We appreciate the detailed information about your concern, Big Dave.
Based on what you said, it seems that you want to know the exact way on how to set up and use an upfront deposits or retainers. Here's the process that we can take:
The detailed instructions for every steps are laid out in this article: Manage upfront deposits or retainers.
If you're unsure whether which options is applicable to your scenario, I'd recommend reaching out to your accountant. They can provide you more ideas on how you can record them in QuickBooks.
Please let me know if you need assistance in any of the steps provided in the article. Have a great day!
@Big Dave you cannot have it both ways. Money in cannot be both income and liability. It can be income but when you disperse the funds it would be an expense. Or it is a liability that is reduced when you pay it out.
Rather than invoices as suggested by @JamesDuanT you may instead need to think about your partner organizations as vendors and create a bill (to be paid) for the current week/month collection that will be dispersed next week/month. By entering a bill it creates a liability in Accounts Payable, which will then show up even in an accrual balance sheet (under accrual rules the expense will post when the bill is created but under cash rules the expense will not occur until the check is written)
Thanks for the replies and advice, gentlemen. I will try it both ways to see which way works best for the monthly reports I prepare for our officers and directors. We do use cash accounting rather than accrual, so I don't know how the difference impacts the standard P&L and Balance Sheet reports I pull without customized modifications from Quickbooks.
Anyone else have other thoughts?
Hi there, Big Dave.
Just following up with you. With QuickBooks you can view reports based off either accounting method.
For instance with accrual the time when you enter a transaction and the time when you actually pay or receive cash can be two separate events, but the reports will show income regardless if you've been paid yet. It takes into account what income will be coming in at later time.
Versus cash where you only show income or expenses that you actually received. You can view more on both of these methods and which work for you by viewing these articles below:
We here in the QuickBooks Community are always available to help. Please don't hesitate to reach out if you have any other questions. Have a great day.
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