[GNC] best accounting practice for refund

Adrien Monteleone adrien.monteleone at lusfiber.net
Fri Jun 28 21:14:27 EDT 2019


No, No, No.

Two different methods/systems. (I see my earlier apology for confusion was foresight)


EITHER you transfer the credit from AR to a liability account and pay from it, (really, only if a local CPA says you should)

OR, you leave the credit note open till needed. (the sane and easy method I recommend unless a local CPA has told you to do something different)


**aside** While an open credit note is ’technically’ a liability, it will report as a negative asset. (a credit to AR)


I’m suggesting the easier and simpler path is to process your credit notes as you always have, just don’t cut the check and pay them out. Leave them ‘unpaid.’

Then when you need to apply their balance to a future invoice, do so by selecting both the credit note(s) and the invoice(s) to be paid in the process payment window.

This will reduce the balance owed on the invoice by the amount offset by the credit note(s).

If the credit note(s) is/are more than the invoices you are trying to offset, then GnuCash will retain the excess with the credit note to use on a subsequent invoice.

Regards,
Adrien


> On Jun 28, 2019, at 5:47 PM, Eric Rathhaus (general) <rathhaus_law at yahoo.com> wrote:
> 
> So when I did my way, the liabilities account is reduced by the invoice doesn’t;t show the payment. Grr.  
> 
> So you’re suggesting leaving the credit n the AR account, which is held as a liability?  But then how to I pay future invoices from it?
> 
>> On Jun 28, 2019, at 12:32 PM, Adrien Monteleone <adrien.monteleone at lusfiber.net> wrote:
>> 
>> That’s one way to do it.
>> 
>> Or, the simpler way is leave the credit note outstanding and use it to offset an invoice when needed.
>> 
>> Regards,
>> Adrien
>> 
>>> On Jun 28, 2019, at 1:58 PM, Eric Rathhaus (general) <rathhaus_law at yahoo.com> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Thanks.
>>> 
>>> I followed your instructions but the credit note when printed appears as an invoice to my client with the credit showing as an amount owed.  In my accounts it does appear as a “payment” in my AR account. 
>>> 
>>> I’m a little confused as to steps 2 and 3 now.  If I understand you, I will proceed to process a payment of the AR account to the liabilities account for the entire amount of the credit.  Then, I begin to process payments against new invoices thru the liabilities account until it reaches zero.  Correct?
>>> 
>>>> On Jun 27, 2019, at 11:29 PM, Adrien Monteleone <adrien.monteleone at lusfiber.net> wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> Nope.
>>>> 
>>>> 1. Create the credit note and assign the line items either back to the same original income account(s) used, or to a new one along the lines of “Returns & Allowances” or “Refunds” or something similar if you want to keep track of this separately. (this is considered a ‘contra account’ because its normal balance is opposite of what is expected)
>>>> 
>>>> 1a. Post the credit note. (should default to be assigned to AR)
>>>> 
>>>> 2. Then ‘pay’ it with the liability account you created.
>>>> 
>>>> This will affect your books at each step like so:
>>>> 
>>>> 1a. Income is debited either directly or via the contra account
>>>> 1a. AR is credited for the amount of the credit note
>>>> 2. AR is debited for the amount of the credit note
>>>> 2. The Liabilities:Credit Payments account is credited (your now tracking a pre-payment liability owed to the client)
>>>> 
>>>> The only step that should be different in this process than what you were doing before is step 2. Instead of paying with the checking account and printing a check, you’re transferring the customer’s AR balance to a liability account.
>>>> 
>>>> Step 1 - the credit note itself, should be the same as before.
>>>> 
>>>> There will then be a new step 3 - which is where you ‘pay’ a future invoice with all or part of the balance in the new liability account.
>>>> 
>>>> -----
>>>> 
>>>> *NOTE*
>>>> 
>>>> If you don’t need to keep track of the pre-payment as a liability (not necessary unless a CPA advised it) then just skip creating that special account and don’t use it.
>>>> 
>>>> Simply leave the credit note (still created as always) outstanding till it is needed to offset a future invoice. You don’t even have to send it to the client if they don’t need it.
>>>> 
>>>> When you need to offset a future invoice, process a payment, choose BOTH the credit note and the invoice being offset. Enter any additional payment being made and assign that to the appropriate asset account. Complete the payment.
>>>> 
>>>> Mind you, this is probably the best route to take. It will allow you to still see the overpayment/pre-payment in their account report, and you can send them a statement that reflects this. The option with the liability account makes this very difficult.
>>>> 
>>>> Sorry if I created any confusion. With the original limited info, I was just offering all the options I could think of. Which route you take is up to you as it best meets your needs and requirements.
>>>> 
>>>> Regards,
>>>> Adrien
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>>> On Jun 28, 2019, at 12:39 AM, Eric Rathhaus (general) <rathhaus_law at yahoo.com> wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>> Something didn’t;t work.  I created a credit note for the client and created a new account “Credit Prepayments) under Liabilities.  When creating the note, instead of selecting an income account, I selected the new liabilities account and then posted the note.  I then tried to process a payment for an outstanding invoice using the credit note but nothing happened.  Where did I go wrong?
>>>>> 
>>>>>> On Jun 26, 2019, at 9:09 PM, Eric Rathhaus (general) <rathhaus_law at yahoo.com> wrote:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Thanks!
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> On Jun 26, 2019, at 7:41 PM, Adrien Monteleone <adrien.monteleone at lusfiber.net> wrote:
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> In that case, certainly, you need to use credit notes.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> I don’t see any reason why this ‘wouldn’t work from an accounting standpoint’ but if you find a problem, instead of cutting a check to the customer as payment for the credit note, combine this with option #2 I listed, and this time, use that Liabilities:Customer Deposits account to ‘pay’ the credit note. This will show you have a liability to them and then you can decrease it by using it to later pay for future work. The credit note is cleared out instantly and you still track the money, however, any Aging Report or Customer Report will no longer reflect this deposit liability as a credit to them. You’d have to handle that part manually in an outside spreadsheet. (you could export the Customer/Aging Report to one sheet tab, export an Account or Transaction Report to another in the same workbook, and then devise a 3rd tab with references to those two to create the proper consolidated report)
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Note that doing it this way really isn’t necessary as GnuCash will track your overall AR and the balance for each customer if you just leave the Credit Notes hanging around until applied as future payments.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> I’d say you should speak to a local CPA, and then if you still have options, which one you go with would be a matter of personal preference.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Regards,
>>>>>>> Adrien
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> On Jun 26, 2019, at 8:51 PM, Eric Rathhaus (general) via gnucash-user <gnucash-user at gnucash.org> wrote:
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> Hi Geert -
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> I already issued the invoices and processed my clients payments against the invoices.  These payments are for filing fees to the US government for which I subsequently cut checks. I created a job for this client that I use to invoice these fees alone. The size of the filing fees is too high for me to provide my client short-term loans to cover and then invoice later.  My client, in turn, won’t issue a payment without an invoice.  So I issue an invoice to my customer to get the prepayment. There are some complicated legal reasons why once per year some of the filing fees won’t be cashed by the government.  The rest of the year everything is fine as I just ensure the client paid all the invoices for the special job and then bill for my work and other expenses on invoices for each specific job.  This year I have over $12k of  funds I need to return to the client somehow.  In the past I created a credit note under the special job and sent my client a check.  This year they want me to use the credit to offset invoices for subsequent work.  I like the idea of creating a credit note under the special filing fee job I use for these payments and then applying the credit against other invoices I issue but I’m not sure if it will work from an accounting standpoint. 
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> On Jun 26, 2019, at 1:29 PM, Geert Janssens <geert.gnucash at kobaltwit.be> wrote:
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> The way I understand your scenario I believe you can model what the customer 
>>>>>>>>> does almost one to one into gnucash actions.
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> 1. Customer prepays for expenses -> Create a payment for that customer using 
>>>>>>>>> Business->Customer->Process Payment
>>>>>>>>> You can choose to map this payment to outstanding invoices or not. If you 
>>>>>>>>> don't, it will simply register a prepayment for the customer.
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> 2. At some point you send an invoice to the user -> Create this invoice using
>>>>>>>>> Business->Customer->New Invoice... and post it.
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> 3. Now you can choose - does your invoice have (some of) the prepaid expenses 
>>>>>>>>> ? If so, apply (part of) that prepayment to your invoice using Business-
>>>>>>>>>> Customer->Process Payment
>>>>>>>>> After this there may be an outstanding balance the customer still has to pay.
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> 4. If the customer pays that outstanding balance, create the payment via 
>>>>>>>>> Business->Customer->Process payment.
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> Then repeat for the next cycle/invoice.
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> If you are importing your payments instead of manually entering them, you can 
>>>>>>>>> also select the payment in the respective account, right-click and choose 
>>>>>>>>> "Assign as payment..." instead of the above mentioned "Process Payment"
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> As Adrien also suggests at any time you could look at the Receivables Aging or 
>>>>>>>>> Customer report to see what's the customer's current balance.
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> Regards,
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> Geert
>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>> Op woensdag 26 juni 2019 21:52:43 CEST schreef Adrien Monteleone:
>>>>>>>>>> You have at least 2 options I can think of at the moment:
>>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>> #1 - continue to issue credit notes in your system, but don’t send them out
>>>>>>>>>> or pay them with a check. When you have the next positive invoice, ‘pay’ a
>>>>>>>>>> portion (or all) of that invoice with the credit note. Simply process a
>>>>>>>>>> payment, select the credit note line and an invoice line you want to apply
>>>>>>>>>> it to in the top part of the window. GnuCash will offset the invoice with
>>>>>>>>>> the credit note for you. If the credit note is more than the invoice, it
>>>>>>>>>> will retain the left over as remaining AR credit to be used on subsequent
>>>>>>>>>> invoices. You can see the customer’s balance any time either by looking at
>>>>>>>>>> an AR aging report, or a Customer Report. Outstanding credit notes appear
>>>>>>>>>> in the Invoices Due Reminder window.
>>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>> #2 - If your client regularly pays in advance based on an estimate and you
>>>>>>>>>> invoice later, instead of applying the payment to an invoice, apply it to a
>>>>>>>>>> Liabilities:Customer Deposits account. Then when you create and post the
>>>>>>>>>> final invoice, process a payment for it from this account. You could keep a
>>>>>>>>>> separate deposit account for each customer but that might get tedious. You
>>>>>>>>>> can run a report on the account sorted by payee to show that info and even
>>>>>>>>>> keep that report open in a tab if desired, choosing to refresh it as
>>>>>>>>>> needed. If this might only happen for pre-paid expenses, then you can still
>>>>>>>>>> use this method, but only for the pre-paid expense part, which you could
>>>>>>>>>> (or not) choose to invoice separately.
>>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>> Regards,
>>>>>>>>>> Adrien
>>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>>> On Jun 26, 2019, at 1:46 PM, Eric Rathhaus office <eric at ewrlaw.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>>> Hi - I have a client for whom I have many jobs.  On some of these jobs,
>>>>>>>>>>> the client prepaid expenses that I did not use.  In the past, I’ve always
>>>>>>>>>>> created a credit note for a refund and sent the client a check.  However,
>>>>>>>>>>> my client prefers instead that I credit this amount towards future work. 
>>>>>>>>>>> I’m not sure how to accomplish this cleanly.  I could keep a running
>>>>>>>>>>> total of the amount and discount from the total prepayment until it’s
>>>>>>>>>>> used up.  But this seems clunky and maybe not the best practice.  Any
>>>>>>>>>>> other suggestions on how to account for the refund against future work?
>>>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>>> Kind regards,
>>>>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>>>>> Eric W. Rathhaus




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