Receiving Inventory With or Without Bills in QuickBooks
by Sandra Emanuel on 04/08/14
Receiving Inventory With or
Without Bills in QuickBooks
When your
goods come rolling in, be sure to document them correctly.
You’re probably happy to see couriers delivering inventory
items you’ve ordered since it means you can ship to customers, but recording
the new stock means yet another repetitive task.
QuickBooks’ tools can help with this, but you need to be
sure you’re using the right forms. There are two different ones that you’ll
use, depending on whether or not you’ve received a bill.
Bill in Hand
Either way, you’ll get started by opening the Vendors menu (or clicking
the arrow next to Receive
Inventory on the home page). If you do have a bill, select Receive Items and Enter Bill (Receive Inventory with Bill on
the home page). The Enter
Bills screen opens; select your vendor from the drop-down list.
If you had entered a purchase order, you’ll see something like this:
Figure 1: If any purchase orders exist for that vendor in QuickBooks, you’ll see this message.
Click Yes.
The Open Purchase Orders window
will open displaying a list. Select the PO(s) for the items received by placing
a checkmark in front of it/them and click OK.
Tip: If you
accidentally click No, the vendor’s information will be
filled in on the Enter
Bills screen, and you
can click the Select
PO icon in the toolbar.
Now the PO item information has been entered in the window.
Check the form for accuracy, then save it.
Of course, if there was no purchase order, you’ll enter the
information about the items you received (descriptions, prices, etc.) in the Enter Bills screen.
Delayed
Billing
If you receive items without a bill, you still need to
document the shipment. Open the Vendors
menu
and select Receive Items
(or click the arrow next to the Receive
Inventory icon on the home page and select Receive Inventory without Bill).
The Create
Item Receipts window opens. Select the vendor by clicking the down arrow
next to that field. If a message about
existing purchase orders for that vendor appears, click Yes or No, and either
select the appropriate POs or enter the information about what you received.
If the items were already earmarked for a specific customer
on the purchase order, the Customer
column
will have an entry in it, and there will be a check mark in the Billable column.
If there was no purchase order and you’re entering the information, you can
complete those two fields manually.
Figure 2: If a purchase order was already
assigned to a customer and is billable, that information should appear in this
window.
Enter a reference number if you’d like. The Memo field should
already be filled in with Received
items (bill to follow), and the Bill Received box
should not be checked.
Warning: Be
sure that the Items
tab is highlighted when
you’re recording physical inventory. If there are related costs like freight
charges or sales tax, click the Expenses
tab and enter them
there.
Paying Up
When the bill comes in for merchandise that you’ve already
recorded on an Item Receipt, you’ll use this procedure to pay it:
·
Click Vendors | Enter Bill for Received Items,
which opens the Select
Item Receipt window.
·
Select the vendor, then the correct
Item Receipt.
Note: If
the bill corresponds to more than one Item Receipt, you’ll need to convert each
into a bill separately. You can create a new bill if some items received were
not accounted for on Item Receipts.
· Click the box next to Use the item receipt date for the bill date if you want to match it to the inventory availability date.
Figure 3: You’ll select purchase orders that you want to create bills for in this window.
·
Click OK. The Enter Bills screen opens, which can be processed
like you’d handle any bill.
Though it may seem like extra work, this last procedure is important, since it prevents you from recording the same inventory items twice.
It’s easy to get tangled up on these procedures. We hope
you’ll consult us when you begin implementing inventory management in
QuickBooks, or when you’re taking on a new task there. It’s a lot easier to
prevent errors than to go back and fix them.