On 3/5/2022 4:03 AM, Adrien Monteleone wrote:
On 3/5/22 12:50 AM, arthur brogard via gnucash-user wrote:
We have only one property.  Only one tenant.  Simplest possible case I guess.
I'm thinking I must:
. Create an 'accounts receivable'  account.That would be an income account I guess.  'Other income' ?

Accounts Receivable is an Asset account.

As David noted, if you go through the setup wizard and choose 'Business Accounts' you'll get it created automatically for you.

Wait a moment folks. "Accounts Receivable" is an accounting CONCEPT. You can have such an account even if NOT keeping books on the accrual basis (required for using the built in gnucash "business features".

We are being asked "what should I do" by a person who has only one rental property, one tenant, etc. And who might want to have books on the cash basis rather than accrual. We have been told that rental PAYMENTS are often/usually not the "right amount" and that the tenant might be in arrears of ahead. In other words, not going to be enough to simply enter transactions when something is paid debiting cash and crediting rental income. There is more to track:

Can have an asset account "rent owed" (that's  the equivalent A/R)  and an income account "rent not received" (that would NOT be included in the P&L report). The transaction between these two could be scheduled as automatic.

But then when the tenant DOES make a payment, the transaction is much more complicated. It has to BOTH debit cash and credit "rent owed" AND transfer that same amount between rent not received and rent income. Yes more work because you are tracking two different things.

Two way split transactions can be hard to enter (especially for a beginner) but this is a special case where there is a trick that can be used. Essentially going to first enter a one sided split and then "correct" it.

When the tenant makes a payment begin a transaction debiting cash for TWICE the amount and hit "split" entering "journal mode". Change the Imbalance amount (it will be a credit) to the correct amount (HALF) and specify the account as "rent owed" and then for the new Imbalance "rental income". But do NOT finish the transaction yet. Go up to the line where the account is cash and change to the correct amount (Half) and now the Imbalance will be debit. Specify that account to be "rent not received". See, in addition to recording the receipt of rental income also recorded the reduction of what the tenant owes. A printout of the account "rent owed" can be showed to the tenant << it will have all the "rent due" transactions, all the "rent payment"  transactions, and the balance owed.

Of course if not up to "splits" can simply enter two simple transactions. But like I said, this is a special case. The general case of two way split doesn't have the same number of debit and credit accounts and the amounts can all be different as long as total credits equals total debits.  Unless you have first computed that that total amount (outside of gnucash) you don't know with what amount to start. Here there are the same number of debits and credits, two of each, all for the same amount, so the right amount to start with is TWICE that amount.

Michael D Novack



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