Stan, I see what you are saying. Practically I think I need to process the invoice payment twice, first part payment (80) to Accounts Receivable then another payment (20) to Assets: WHT. But I don't seem to have this ability in gnucash because when I process an invoice payment in the 'post to' box only has Assets: Accounts Receivable as an option in the pull down menu. Help!
Paul On 2020-10-01 19:14, Paul W via gnucash-user wrote: > Foreign Government A keeps this money and My Government B will credit this > amount against my corporation tax liability. > > My invoice is for the full amount, £100. > > Usually (without WHT) when the invoice is paid the full amount is > sent to my Accounts Receivable. In this case I think the way to do it > is for gnucash to send £100 to Accounts Receivable then £80 will go > from here to my Asset: Bank Account and £20 to Asset: WHT. How do I > achieve this in gnucash? Just to be clear, the answer to any question like this is always, "Think of GnuCash as a pen-and-ink ledger. First determine what entries you need to make, to cover your own accounting and tax needs. Once you know that, you can make those entries in GnuCash." > Do you agree this is the way to do it? I don't think so. Since you will collect 80 pounds not 100, the amount in receivables should, I think, be 80 pounds not 100. The 20 pounds is an asset, but it is a prepaid tax expense and not a receivable. Debit: Assets: Receivable from {customer} 80 Debit: Assets: Tax prepaid to {Foreign Government} 20 Credit: Income: Sales 100 Then at the end of the year you make an adjusting entry: Debit: Liabilities: Tax payable to {My Government) {total for the year} Credit: Assets: Tax prepaid to {Foreign Government} {same amount} That lets you track the amounts invoice by invoice or by annual totals. For strictly accounting purposes, that is what I would do. However, your country may mandate doing it in a particular way, so you may want to get local advice on that point. There's no need to bring GnuCash into that discussion; just ask how debits and credits should be recorded. -- Regards, Stan Brown Tehachapi, CA, USA https://BrownMath.com https://OakRoadSystems.com _______________________________________________ gnucash-user mailing list gnucash-user@gnucash.org To update your subscription preferences or to unsubscribe: https://lists.gnucash.org/mailman/listinfo/gnucash-user If you are using Nabble or Gmane, please see https://wiki.gnucash.org/wiki/Mailing_Lists for more information. ----- Please remember to CC this list on all your replies. You can do this by using Reply-To-List or Reply-All.