I use similar to what you suggest. Using Quick books (I don't offer VoIP services only professional IT and PBX sales) I have a bank account called Paypal. When one pays thru Paypal I receive the payment into Paypal bank account, I then write out a check to Paypal for the transaction fee. When I withdraw the money into my real bank account I transfer it to my bank account within qucik books.
On 11/12/10, Alex Balashov <abalas...@evaristesys.com> wrote: > Greetings, > > I apologise in advance that this is a bit off-topic. However, I know > that many of you who run service providers take a high volume of > individual Paypal payments, many of them recurring. > > My question is this: When withdrawing Paypal payments into a bank > account, how do you correlate them on the bank statement to the relevant > Paypal payment activity, and therefore the right customer/invoice/etc, > from an accounting perspective? > > When there is a manageably small number of payments involved, it can be > done chronologically. And likewise, if the amounts are highly specific > to each customer, that is also useful as a correlator. However, I have > found nothing embedded in the transaction ID or other identifiers that > show up in the online banking interface from which a reference to an > original Paypal transaction can be reconstructed. It seems to me that > the process of withdrawing money to a bank is a separate transaction > from receiving payment via Paypal anyway, since Paypal gives you the > ability to specify how much of your balance in its account you want to > withdraw. > > I suppose the easiest thing to do - and I imagine, the norm - is to just > record the incoming payments against open invoices at the moment they > are received, and put them in an asset account, less the transaction > fees. When Paypal payments clear into the bank, just move the funds > from one asset account to the other and be done with it, without > attempting to establish whose payment it was that cleared. The invoices > are paid either way, and the ultimate deposit destination of that money > is just an asset transfer technicality. > > Still, I am curious if there are any more advanced options available or > other handy tricks of the trade that anyone would be willing to share on > how to reconcile high volumes of individual Paypal transactions. > > Thanks! > > -- Alex > > P.S. I am referring to plain old Paypal here, not Paypal web payments, > merchant account services, etc. > > -- > Alex Balashov - Principal > Evariste Systems LLC > 1170 Peachtree Street NE > 12th Floor, Suite 1200 > Atlanta, GA 30309 > Tel: +1-678-954-0670 > Fax: +1-404-961-1892 > Web: http://www.evaristesys.com/ > > -- > _____________________________________________________________________ > -- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com -- > > asterisk-biz mailing list > To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: > http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-biz > -- _____________________________________________________________________ -- Bandwidth and Colocation Provided by http://www.api-digital.com -- asterisk-biz mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-biz