My basic approach to such questions is to think about the "5 W's" of reporting (after all, "accounting" is fundamentally about telling an accurate story of what is going on with your money.
How you tell that story is dependent on what the standard practices in your local jurisdiction, as well as how you choose to think of things. Here's how I would think about it. *What* are the taxes? Taxes that I pay are fundamentally an expense, so I will need an "Expense:Taxes" account. For me in the US, I'd probably break that down into different tax accounts based on the nature of the tax (Federal income tax, State income tax, property taxes, self-employment tax, FICA/Medicare, etc). I may also be asked to collect taxes ultimately owed by other people, such as wage withholdings from my employees, or sales taxes on goods/services sold. These are funds I have, but aren't mine, and don't count as income or expenses for me. Rather, they are liabilities. *Where* is the money? If I haven't paid the taxes yet, the money is in a bank account. After I send off the check, I don't have it any more. *When?* This is multiple questions. When do I recognize the expense? When do I cut the check? What's the overall timing? There are a few ways to go about this. One way is to work off a "cash" basis: the tax expense doesn't occur until the check is cut and paid (when you fill out your annual tax return), but you want to set the money aside as you go so you have the cash to pay it. Of course, you are setting aside an estimate, since many cases you won't know your actual tax liability until you pay it. In that case, I'd would open a 2nd bank account and split your deposit between your main account and this tax reserve account: 6 June 2017: Receive payment from Acme Inc for consulting work Income:Consulting Cr. $1000 Asset:Bank:Checking Db. $700 Asset:Bank:Tax Reserve Db. $300 15 April 2018: Income Tax Payment Asset:Bank:Tax Reserve Cr. $300 Asset:Bank:Checking Cr. $25 Expense:Taxes:Income Db. $325 Another way is to recognize the tax on an ongoing basis, "paying" it from a liability account. : 6 June 2017: Receive payment from Acme Inc for consulting work Income: Consulting Cr. $1000 Asset:Bank:Checking Db. $1000 Expense:Taxes:Income Db. $300 Liability:Unpaid Taxes Cr. $300 15 April 2018: Income Tax Payment Asset:Bank:Checking Cr. $325 Liability: Unpaid Taxes Db. $300 Expense:Taxes:Income Db. $25 You might be required to prepay estimated taxes during the year, especially if your estimated tax liability gets too large: 6 June 2017: Receive Payment from Acme Inc for consulting work Income: Consulting Cr. $1000 Asset:Bank:Checking Db. $1000 15 July 2017: Estimated Tax Payment Asset:Bank:Checking Cr. $300 Asset:Prepaid Taxes Db. $300 15 April 2018: Income Tax Payment Asset:Bank:Checking Cr. $25 Asset:Prepaid Taxes Cr. $300 Expense:Taxes:Income Db. $325 Which is best, or proper, will depend on local law and practice, which we (obviously) cannot advise you about. On Wed, Jan 10, 2018 at 9:58 AM <davel...@mac.com> wrote: > > > > On Jan 9, 2018, at 8:04 PM, Chris Smith <ch...@cgsmith.net> wrote: > > > > I am using GnuCash for my freelance business. My dad always taught me to > > set 30% of a check aside for the government's share. > > > > How would you enter this to keep track of the tax liability? I am > thinking > > I'd have to enter it against my *Income:Sales* account as a transfer to > > *Liabilities:Tax* > > > > I figure at the end of the year *Asset:Checking Account* can transfer to > > satisfy the true Tax liability. > > > > One thing to note, I *don't* want the liability to effect reports on > sales > > reports. :/ > > > > Am I just overthinking this? > > > > -- > > Chris > > <ch...@cgsmith.net> > > > > What I do so I have a basic idea of what my income/expenses are is to make > an expense for taxes and a liability for taxes and do a transaction between > those two each month. And then when I pay the taxes, the transaction is > between the checking account and the liability tax account. > > So it won't affect income, but it will affect your net income (income - > expenses) as it should. > > Others may chime in with more definitive answers as IANAA. > > HTH, > Dave > > _______________________________________________ > gnucash-user mailing list > gnucash-user@gnucash.org > https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-user > ----- > Please remember to CC this list on all your replies. > You can do this by using Reply-To-List or Reply-All. > _______________________________________________ gnucash-user mailing list gnucash-user@gnucash.org https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-user ----- Please remember to CC this list on all your replies. You can do this by using Reply-To-List or Reply-All.