We received a duplicate payment from a customer in the prior year and want to refund it in the current year. We issued a check and want to apply it to the payment to clear it from their account, but QB is asking for the closed period password. What records are changed in the prior year that require the password? I want to assure our accountant that it won't affect financials. Will it?
Setting a closing date and password is a smart move to safeguard your financial reports by preventing changes to past transactions, cubienoobie. Let's talk about what happens when you process a refund from a previous year.
When you issue a refund for a payment made in a prior year, QuickBooks Desktop views this as an adjustment to accounts payable or receivable from the time of the original transaction. To make changes before the closing date, you'll need the closed period password.
For a deeper dive into managing your closing date settings, take a look at this helpful article: Set or change the closing date and password in QuickBooks Desktop.
Once you have issued the refund and applied it to the original payment, the refund will adjust the accounts receivable and the bank account, but it won't affect the financial statements for the prior year. It will only impact the current year's financials. It could be helpful to consult with your accountant to confirm that the transaction is recorded correctly and does not inadvertently alter last year's financials.
Need assistance preparing your accounts for year-end? Our Year-end guide for QuickBooks Desktop is designed to help you verify that your transactions are accurate.
If any questions linger about handling refunds for a prior year in QuickBooks Desktop, don't hesitate to start a new conversation with us.
"We issued a check and want to apply it to the payment to clear it from their account, but QB is asking for the closed period password."
QB shouldn't ask for the password unless you're making an entry that hits the closed period. For the refund, did you just write a check (Banking > Write checks), date it in 2025, and assign A/R to it? If so, then you should be able to go to Customers > Receive Payments and apply the "bill" created by the refund check to the credit created by the overpayment. Make sure that is dated 2025 also.
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