Forum Discussion
Hi Richard1052,
Keeping it simple and reflecting on what’s actually happened is the key to record all of this. Since you paid the pro-forma invoice upfront, create a Spend Money transaction. Allocate the full amount to a "Prepayments/Deposits to Suppliers" account. This will track the payment you made before receiving goods. Once the supplier sends the proper invoice for the partial order, enter it as a Purchases Bill. Match this bill to the prepayment you recorded earlier this links the payment to the actual invoice. For the broken items that resulted in a credit adjustment note, create a Supplier Credit Note in MYOB. Use this to adjust the original bill or negotiate its application to future invoices, depending on the agreement you’ve got with the supplier. After all that, make sure you’re tracking the leftover prepayment balance this represents what the supplier still owes you. Depending on your arrangement, you’re either waiting for the rest of the order or a refund if no further goods are coming.
You can check this help article for supplier prepayments for more info. It’s all about recording the transaction flows just like they happened!
Regards,
Shella
Hi Shella,
Thanks for the reply.
I allocated the pre-payment as a "Deposit to Suppliers" account and entered the invoice for the goods received like any other purchases. But this is where I get stuck.
What do you mean by "Match this bill to the prepayment"?
I tried to "Record supplier payment" but there is no option to choose "Deposit to Suppliers". Should it not appear there as an option?
Regards,
Richard
- Genreve_S7 months agoMYOB Moderator
Hi Richard1052,
Here’s a good tip: try to record your transactions as close as possible to how they actually happened. So, if they’ve sent you an invoice for the full price and you’ve already paid it, just pop that into your software as an invoice for the full amount and match it with the payment.
Now, since they’ve sent you another invoice for only the items they delivered, you can record that the same way as well. If the second invoice is meant to replace the first one, you can just create a negative invoice for the same amount as the first invoice to cancel it out. You can read through this link if you need help with recording the negative invoice.
Regards,
Genreve
- Richard10527 months agoExperienced User
Hi Genreve_S & Shella_A
This is how I tackled the problem.
- The prepayment was paid to the supplier using a credit card and the transaction appeared in the bank feed.
- I allocated the transaction to "Deposits to Suppliers" account.
- The new invoice (bill) with items was entered as a purchase like any other invoice.
- I went into the bill and allocated the amount to purchase and freight as itemised.
- On the next line underneath, I selected category as "Deposits to Suppliers" and entered the entire bill amount as a negative and comment, 'Apply prepayment to invoice'. Bill has now reduced to zero.
- Going into the Chart of Accounts, I can see the amount has reduced.
I think this make sense.
- Richard10527 months agoExperienced User
Screenshot showing application of prepayment to the invoice and reducing the balance to zero.
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