I am just  making this late post only to say thanks for all the input and 
inform that my silence indicates my brow furrowed attempts at understanding and 
implementing.
I hope no one thinks I am rudely and ungratefully ignoring their help.  :)

    On Saturday, 5 March 2022, 06:51:20 pm ACDT, flywire <flywi...@gmail.com> 
wrote:  
 
 Excellent question Arthur. This isn't a budget issue and you have no idea if 
tenants are in front or behind unless you compare it to payments due. Adrien 
seems to have presented the GnuCash features the best using a scheduled A/R.
I've used a different approach with quickbooks for this purpose because it has 
classes allowing one set of accounts to be tagged to different tenants but it 
should be equivalent with GnuCash. Accounts include: Income/rent, bond 
(contra), Expense/water (partially reimbursable), various misc income and 
expenditure relating to tenants. It's easy to miss seldom used accounts.
My concern is A/R is a lot of work just to get tenant statements if it's not 
used elsewhere. It is similar to the issue raised last month regarding tracking 
vehicles except for the regular rent due: 
https://lists.gnucash.org/pipermail/gnucash-user/2022-February/099785.html As 
described GnuCash has filtering on tags (eg report a single tenant) but no 
grouping (eg reports for every tenant and everything else). This is important 
to ensure all transactions are accounted for with tags.
Alternative Process:1. Upload bank transactions to GnuCash2. In GnuCash terms, 
run a transaction report sorted by say date and split notes (assuming it 
contains a tag) with payments3. Open report in a spreadsheet with sheets for 
each tenant having: Date, Due, Payments, Balance Owing4. Append date and 
payments to each tenants sheet5. Append date and amount due for each period6. 
Sort by date and payments then copy balance owing formula down for running 
total7. Check header and footer then print rental statement
The spreadsheet ends up as a template that is updated. It's a simple process 
but it's manual so it carries a risk of mistakes. While GnuCash doesn't support 
grouping in reports the advantage of open source is the whole thing could 
easily be automated under piecash to generate reports.
A dozen transactions would make a handy demo dataset.  
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