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I have a question regarding owners draw and retained earnings.
We are a partnership with 3 partners. Our managing partner is the only partner with equity in the firm at this time. I was brought on mid-way through 2015 so this is my first year end to close out.
First question is regarding the draw accounts. These accounts have never been closed out at the end of the year. So they just have a running negative total from the firms inception.
What is the proper process in QB to close out these accounts at the end of the year?
Being that we are setup as a partnership what should I be doing with retained earnings at the end of the year? I do see that QB has automatically made our journal entry of net income into retained earnings. Should retained earnings then be distributed to the partner equity accounts?
Any help is appreciated.
Solved! Go to Solution.
I recommend you have the following for owner/partner equity accounts (one set for each partner if a partnership)
[name] Equity (do not post to this account it is a summing account)
>> Equity
>> Equity Drawing - you record value you take from the business here
>> Equity Investment - record value you put into the business here
End of the year you do journal entries, for each partner
debit investment, credit equity for the total in investment
debit equity, credit drawing for the total in drawing
then one more journal entry
debit retained earnings for the full amount
credit partner 1 equity for his portion
credit partner 2 equity for his portion
etc etc
I recommend you have the following for owner/partner equity accounts (one set for each partner if a partnership)
[name] Equity (do not post to this account it is a summing account)
>> Equity
>> Equity Drawing - you record value you take from the business here
>> Equity Investment - record value you put into the business here
End of the year you do journal entries, for each partner
debit investment, credit equity for the total in investment
debit equity, credit drawing for the total in drawing
then one more journal entry
debit retained earnings for the full amount
credit partner 1 equity for his portion
credit partner 2 equity for his portion
etc etc
@Rustler what are your thoughts on doing this, specifically the closing of net income/retained earnings to partner's equity accounts with respect to cash basis and accrual basis. That # will be different and you can't make an entry for both. I certainly prefer accrual basis but sometimes it's easier to see it on the cash basis, especially as that's what my clients usually file tax returns on.
@UMDJeremy wrote:
@Rustler what are your thoughts on doing this, specifically the closing of net income/retained earnings to partner's equity accounts with respect to cash basis and accrual basis. That # will be different and you can't make an entry for both. I certainly prefer accrual basis but sometimes it's easier to see it on the cash basis, especially as that's what my clients usually file tax returns on.
You have no choice, QB is accrual accounting
it only reports on cash basis
When you create the Journal entry you're just bringing the balance back to zero for the equity account at the end of the year?
I'm only asking because read to setup a 2017 account and then another for 2018 for equity, but now in 2019 the 2017 account still shows balance in my balance sheet.
@Rustler Props and cheers, this solved it for me. Thank you.
As I understand your method, for each partner we're taking the last year's worth of draws and investment and transferring them to a new equity account. In effect, the draw and investment sub-accounts now only show the current year's activity, which is exactly what I needed for doing my 1065.
This new equity account accrues the equity for each partner at the end of each year, so for now I've called it Accrued Equity.
I found it useful to keep it as a separate account, separate from the draw and investment sub-accounts. Those are now together in as sub-accounts to a main account I now call Current Equity. That way the Current Equity totals go straight across into my Form 1065 Schedule K.
Those terms work for me. Yet are there more accurate/correct terms for what I'm calling Accrued Equity and Current Equity?
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