Occassionally, a negative balance arises in Accounts Payable
(A/P), and business owners who take care of their own books don't understand
how the problem happened or what to do about it. Here's the scoop: QuickBooks Support Number
A negative balance in A/P can sometimes mean that bills were
entered, and checks were written against those bills, but the original bills
somehow got deleted or voided. The bill-payment checks are left
"hanging" in the system, creating a negative balance in A/P.
If you notice a negative balance in A/P, or even if you have
certain vendors who show a negative balance in the Vendor list, go to the
Reports menu and select Vendors & Payables. Then select the Unpaid Bills
Detail report. Scan through the report and look for negative amounts. If you
see any, double click on them.
After double clicking, a bill-payment check should open.
Look at the lower half of the screen. Possibly, there will be no bill located
here, no amount at all, nothing to indicate that this check was applied to a
bill. If so, leave this window open, and go to the Vendors menu. Select Enter
Bills. Enter a bill to the vendor you just saw on the last screen. Be sure to
use the same amount you saw on the check. You will need to guess as to the
correct due date - better yet, try to locate the original bill so you can get
correct information off it. After entering it, click Save & New to leave
the window open if you have more bills to enter, or Save & Close to close
the window if you are finished.
After entering the bill, go back to the bill-payment check.
Look at the lower half of the screen - the bill should be there. If it is,
place a checkmark next to it, and enter the correct amount (the amount on the
check) in the far right column. Click Save and Close. QuickBooks will ask if
you are sure you want to save the transaction - click Yes.
Go to the Unpaid Bills Detail report and click Refresh. The
bill-payment check, which caused the negative amount on this report, should now
be gone. Follow these steps for all negative amounts you see on this report.
Important: notice that you did not repay the re-entered
bills - you did not use the Pay Bills function. The original bill-payment
checks were in the system, and we simply applied those checks to the re-entered
bills. If you accidentally repay the re-entered bills, this will not solve the
problem of having a negative balance in A/P.
If you see negative amounts that DO have bills applied
against them, that is an issue beyond the scope of this article.
Jennifer A. Thieme is a Certified QuickBooks ProAdvisor who
loves to help people with QuickBooks. She brings unique insight, clear
instructions, and over ten years of experience to all of her QuickBooks
articles. Owner of Solid Rock Accounting Services, Jennifer's clients enjoy
these same benefits on a personal and regular basis. You can too - visit http://www.quickbooks.technical-supportnumber.com/
Nancy
Smyth is a Qualified QuickBooks ProAdvisor and Intuit Gold Designer
specializing in providing QuickBooks clients an effective simple efficient way
of complying with Federal and State Prevailing Wage Laws create certified
pay-roll views from QuickBooks details. For more details regarding Qualified
Pay-roll Solution-QuickBooks Support Number
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