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credit card transaction

How Do I Produce a Report of Vendor Purchases?

Chief Mechanic · September 10, 2010 ·

Let’s assume that vendor purchases include both purchases of inventory and expenses paid.  With that assumption, there no simple report to address all situations.  Finding the right report depends on the information you want to include on the report.

QuickBooks provides 2 reports that include vendor purchases: the Purchases by Vendor Detail Report and the Purchases by Vendor Summary Report.  Both of these reports can be found on the Reports->Purchases menu.

These reports are a simple way to identify vendor purchases, but they contain an important limitation: the reports only include purchases recorded on the Items tab of bills, checks, and credit card charges.  They do not include transactions recorded on the Expenses tab or payroll-related expenses.

Another approach is to use the Expenses by Vendor Detail Report or the Expenses by Vendor Summary Report, found on the Reports->Company & Financial menu.  However, this approach also contains a limitation: it only includes transactions sent to a general ledger expense account (whether or not the transaction was entered on the Items or the Expenses tab), not vendor purchases of inventory, which are additions to assets.

Vendor purchases (both purchases of inventory and expenses paid) are not the combination of the Purchases by Vendor and the Expenses by Vendor reports.  That’s because it’s possible to enter a transaction on the Items tab where the amount is sent to a general ledger expense account based on the account for that Item.  As a result, such a transaction would appear on both reports, and combining the values on these reports would result in double-counting.

Yet another approach is to start with a Custom Transaction Detail Report (or the Summary report if only summary totals are required) and to filter the report for certain transaction types.  At the simplest level, filter the report by Transaction Type and choose Multiple Transaction Types from the pull down.  When the Select Transaction Types window appears, select Check, Credit Card, Bill, CCard Credit, and Bill Credit.  Those selections will capture vendor purchases by check, bill, or credit card, net of all credits.

QuickBooks Enterprise Solutions 10 Vendor Purchases

With that 1 filter applied, this report is a comprehensive list of purchases by vendor.  However, the report includes the payment side of each transaction, and there is no easy filter setting to restrict which accounts appear on the report and avoid the risk that a vendor purchase in that account would be missed.

Which approach is best suited to identify vendor purchases ultimately depends on the how transactions are entered in QuickBooks and the information sought after on the report.

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Are Credit Card Charges Included On a Cash Basis Report?

Chief Mechanic · September 5, 2010 ·

Yes, credit card charges are included on a cash basis report in QuickBooks.

Credit card charges are generally considered paid for tax purposes when charged, and this is how QuickBooks treats these expenses.

An internet search on this topic reveals a variety of unsupported claims about the application of this accounting treatment, specifically that it varies by the type of card issuer or the type of card.  The claims we’ve investigated are unsupported.  Simply put, credit card or other charge card purchases are considered paid for tax purposes when charged, and that treatment does not depend on the card type or card issuer.

Intuit offers additional explanation for the treatment of credit card charges in this Intuit knowledge base article.

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What Distinguishes a Reimbursable Expense From Other Expenses?

Chief Mechanic · September 1, 2010 ·

A reimbursable expense is an expense that you expect to invoice to a customer or client either at the actual cost or with a markup.  QuickBooks includes features to distinguish reimbursable expenses from other types of expenses and to track which reimbursable expenses have in fact been invoiced to a customer. 

For more information on handling reimbursable expenses, see our related articles on enabling automatically invoicing customers for reimbursable expenses, invoicing a customer for reimbursable expenses, removing expenses from the list of billable expenses to be invoiced to a customer, and finding out which reimbursable expenses haven’t been billed to a customer.

In QuickBooks, the 4 principal ways to record expenses for a business are:

  1. Recording a vendor bill using the Vendor->Enter Bills menu selection
  2. Writing a check using the Banking->Write Checks menu selection or Ctrl + W keyboard shortcut
  3. Recording a credit card transaction using the Banking->Enter Credit Card Charges menu selection
  4. Via a General Journal entry using the Company->Make General Journal Entries… menu selection

When you record an expense using 1 of these 4 methods, you can associate line items on the transaction with one or more Customer:Jobs.  Doing so will enable you to analyze both the expenses as well as the revenues from a job.

When you add a Customer:Job to a line item on a check, vendor bill, credit card charge, or General Journal entry, QuickBooks will automatically put a check mark in the Billable? field.  That check mark in the Billable? field indicates this is a reimbursable expense to be invoiced to a customer or client.  If it’s not, simply remove the check mark by clicking on it.

Unfortunately, there’s presently no way to set the default for the Billable? field to being unchecked for those organizations who want to simply assign expenses to customers and not seek reimbursement.  Leaving this field checked won’t interfere with associating expenses with customers; it’s an important detail if your organization does want to use it to track reimbursable expenses. In either case, with a Customer:Job associated with the line item for the expense, you’ll be able to use QuickBooks to perform job profitability analysis, more commonly known as job costing.

The screens for each of the 4 principal ways to record an expense are shown below.  Here’s the Enter Bills window:

QuickBooks Premier 2009 Enter Bill Reimbursable Expense Tab

The Write Checks window:

QuickBooks Premier 2009 Write Checks Billable

The Enter Credit Card Charges window:

QuickBooks Premier 2009 Enter Credit Card Charge Billable

And the Make General Journal Entries window:

QuickBooks Premier 2009 Make General Journal Entries Billable

Note that the field where you enter the Customer:Job on the Make General Journal Entries window is actually called Name because General Journal entries can be recorded for an entity that isn’t a Customer:Job, such as a Vendor, Employee, or Other Name.

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