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Our partnership makes guaranteed payments to the partners, but occasionally we choose to defer those payments when capital is needed elsewhere.
We want to track "guaranteed payments owed", but I'm not clear what the best approach is for this. Here's what I've got so far:
We've created an "other current liability" account for each partner to reflect payments owed. When payments are scheduled, we create a transaction into this account from an expense account (not sure whether to use cogs or a specific guaranteed payments expense), thereby increasing the liability.
When we make a payment, we create a transaction into this account from our bank account, decreasing the liability.
Is this a sensible approach? How could it be improved?
Solved! Go to Solution.
the guaranteed payment is required to be stated in the partnership agreement, amount and duration, other wise an audit will disallow the P&L expense.
A guaranteed payment is never COGS, it is an expense
the guaranteed payment is required to be stated in the partnership agreement, amount and duration, other wise an audit will disallow the P&L expense.
A guaranteed payment is never COGS, it is an expense
I think you should ask your own CPA, because if this was me, I would be making the Expense entry as "Redeposited" as Partner contribution for Equity, not as liability. You should ask if there is no reason you cannot treat this as "reinvested" instead of "owed."
Your financial reports will look better.
"I feel like deferred guaranteed payments should not show on cash-based reports."
When you use Journal Entries, you bypassed that differentiation and made a brute force accounting entry that always shows on both bases.
I had a similar question as well. I am setting up a partnership for a client of mine on QuickBooks Online. I created three accounts for the partners like Partner's Contributions, Partner's Distributions and Partner's Equity. Now the partners don't have the same percentage of the business, like the one has 97% and the other 3%. One of them gets paid for their services to the partnership, the 3% partner. How do I record that payment under which account does it go to (Do they also get a 1099 to show they got paid?) and also how do I record the retained earnings? Like do I create a retained earning for each partner since they do not have equal percentage. Does QuickBooks Online have something that I can put the percentage of each partner so it does it automatically? Do the partners each get taxed on their own individual portion of the income? Do I need to manually do journal entries in order to put everything in the right place (like retained earnings, etc.)? If one partner doesn't ever take out of the business they are still taxed on their retained earnings correct? How do I create an owner's draw for each partner on QuickBooks online? I appreciate all the help and advice that I get since this is my first time doing a partnership.
@qbteachmt - Must agree with you on this. LLC is such a wildcard in my world. Every one of my clients who set up as LLC files taxes as an S Corp. One reason as is noted, Guaranteed Payments are intended to be paid, not deferred. In my industry, Guaranteed Payments must be paid timely or they can't be billed to Govt customers. I heard Partnerships are the most common IRS audits.
I recall as far back as Accounting 101 in the 1980's we were all warned to avoid Partnerships.
Rustler,
for Guaranteed payment, do i just create chart of account type of expense and call it Guaranteed payment and pay the partner. How is this different then owner withdraw? what is the pro & con?
In QB I am looking to add a guaranteed payment to the expense account. However, in doing so, I see the note below. If not Payroll expense, what is the correct expense account for the guaranteed payment?
Use Payroll expenses to track payroll expenses. You may want different accounts of this type for things like:
Thank you
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