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Post Info TOPIC: Offset a payment to a company against what they owe us


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Offset a payment to a company against what they owe us
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Hello

I have just joined this forum, so hello everyone! I've been bookkeeping for a year in a small company, and use Xero online software (which is fab!)

I am getting myself very confused, so I am hoping someone can talk sense to me We owe a company say £10, but they owe us say £30. We want to offset what we owe against what they owe, so they only pay us £20.

Do I send them a credit note for £10? Or do they send me one? How do I account for it? I thought they would send us a credit note, but they have asked me for one... oh dear...

Thanks in advance for all your advice!

 



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Using your example, your customer would pay you £20.  Your supplier ledger would show that you owed them £10; the customer ledger would now also show £10 being outstanding.

You would then need to contra (or net off) these two balances.  I haven't used Xero so it may have a function that can do this.  If it doesn't, then to clear these two ledger balances, you would either have to post (i) a dummy sales credit and a dummy purchase credit or (ii) a dummy customer receipt and a dummy supplier payment.

Neither party should need to issue actual credit notes.



-- Edited by Robert Pearce on Thursday 8th of December 2011 03:11:37 PM

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Pearce & Co - Chartered Accountant and Chartered Tax Adviser 

www.pearceandcoaccountants.co.uk

These comments are outline only and are not a substitute for specific professional advice.



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Fabulous, thanks for your help.

It seems that Xero can apply a payment received and a payment due to the same invoice, so that makes it really easy.

So I don't need to issue any document at all to the company we owe, but just tell them what I have done - is that correct?

Thanks so much for your help!



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techietoria wrote:

So I don't need to issue any document at all to the company we owe, but just tell them what I have done - is that correct?


 Yes, that's right.



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Pearce & Co - Chartered Accountant and Chartered Tax Adviser 

www.pearceandcoaccountants.co.uk

These comments are outline only and are not a substitute for specific professional advice.



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Thanks for the confirmation and the quick reply!

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