Credit notes issued for goods returned to a supplier will be entered firstly in the

Accounting For Credit Notes

Credit notes can sound intimidating but what they are and how they are accounted for is simple. Credit notes are a credit on a customer or vendor account. Store credit is widely used for returns made by a customer at the local brick and mortar store.  Credit memos are sent to vendors when they return items that they cannot accept. This may be because they no longer need the product, or due to shipping damage. Credit notes are handled differently based on the type of credit note and if you are the buyer or seller.

When You Are the Buyer

When your company makes a purchase, but later decides to send it back to the vendor, it is considered a purchase return and decreases your liability to the creditor and decreases your expense. If you have paid for the paper supplies and are issued a credit memorandum, you can use it on a future purchase. Credit notes are often attached to the original invoice for your own records. You also have the option to demand cash back and forfeit the credit memo. The latter is often used if you are unhappy with the paper supplier and are going to use a new supplier. Always be sure the credit note is for the amount of the invoice you originally paid for.

In the event of a credit memo, the journal entry you will make is a debit to the supplier’s account, which reduces your liability. Then you credit the purchase return account, which decreases the expense.

When You Are the Seller

When you have a return made to you, store credit is an option for a brick and mortar store and a credit note for business-to-business operations. For small business owners to offer store credit, the journal entries look a bit different. In this case, there is a debit note to Accounts Payable and credit a Cash account. When the store credit is used, you will debit the Cash account and credit Accounts Payable. This is only if the customer is not getting a refund to their credit card.

Business-to-business journal entries are easy but with a twist. When the return is received, the first journal entry made is a debit to a Sales Return account. The credit is made to the buyer’s account or to accounts receivable. The extra step is reviewing all outstanding credit memos each month. Ideally, the credits are applied as soon as the buyer makes another purchase. It doesn’t always happen and can be an error by the bookkeeper or because the buyer hasn’t made a purchase. If you follow up each month with the outstanding credit notes, you will make sure that they are being used. This makes your general ledger cleaner and your buyer’s happier.

Either as a buyer or seller, credit notes play an important role in business accounting. Tracking them correctly is crucial.

Why Is Recording Credit Notes So Important?

The number one reason you are recording the credit notes is to watch your business health. If you are handing out credit notes on a regular basis, something is wrong. Either your product is faulty or your shipper is mishandling shipments. Or a combination of both. If the bookkeeping department is consistently handing out credit notes to the same buyer all the time, that will warrant further investigation as well.

Credit notes also decrease your net sales, that is something you don’t want happening often. Having that constant bite out of your sales will lend to financial instability. When you attempt to get a loan or extension of credit, the banks are going to look at your financial health. Too small of a profit means you won’t get the loan or extension of credit. Investors will look to your financial records and avoid investing in a company that appears to be financially unhealthy. While all companies set out to offer the best product they can, knowing the many different aspects of how credit notes affect the business is also helpful. During the monthly review, a quick look at the balance sheet and income statement will be able to tell you how well things are going.

One way to ensure that credit notes are being handled efficiently is to use automated accounting software. Automation is a great tool for managing your general ledger. With the automatic application of credit notes, you will eliminate human error made by your bookkeepers. It gives them more time to work on other projects and not bogged down by a long to-do list. Automating your financial statements can also help raise the red flags quickly when reviewed each month. Automation for your invoicing is another bonus and can help add the credit notes appropriately. Even with automation, it is important that your bookkeeper is reviewing everything on a monthly basis so they can follow up with the CFO on any red flags.

What Is A Credit Note? And How To Process Them

A credit note, also known as a credit memorandum or a credit memo, is an official legal document, just like an invoice or a purchase order, that suppliers provide to customers to notify the customer that credit is being applied to their account for any number of reasons. It’s a way to issue full or partial refunds for invoices that have already been issued or paid. You may issue a credit note to your customers because:

  • The customer returned goods or rejected services for any number of reasons
  • There was an overpayment on the original invoice
  • There was a mistake in price on the original invoice
  • The goods were damaged in some way during transit

Credit notes should be issued when there is a need to cancel all or part of an invoice that has already been issued. This is done to keep accounting records straight since invoices cannot be deleted or edited once issued. Credit notes allow you to delete the amount of the invoice from your financial records without deleting the invoice itself. Why is this important? In the US, the UK, Australia, New Zealand, and some other countries, audit trails are legally mandated, meaning that deleting invoices is unlawful.

Credit memos may also be issued in the event a customer makes a change to an order after an invoice has been issued. Sometimes, sellers issue credits to a buyer as an act of goodwill in situations where the original sales agreement did not have an explicit refund policy for returned items. This allows the buyer to exchange the purchased items for others the seller offers.

Generally speaking, you can use credit notes in any situation that would require an invoice to be changed and re-issued. The credit note is often linked to an invoice. However, it is possible to issue them separately, so they can be used against another invoice in the future.

Credit notes should not be confused with debit notes. Debit notes are a formal commercial document that’s issued by a buyer to a seller as a way of requesting a credit note.

What to Include on a Credit Note

The supplier should include the products, quantities, and the product or service prices that were agreed upon by both parties. The credit note normally references the original invoice and states the reason for the credit note. The credit can be provided to the customer as money or it can be applied to future purchases. Generally, vendors opt to apply it to future purchases rather than providing a cash refund.

For admin and recording purposes for both parties, it’s best to also include the following:

  • The date the credit note is issued
  • The credit note number (this can be linked to the invoice number). Like the invoice number, this is added to ensure easy searchability in your system.
  • Customer reference number
  • Payment terms
  • Contact details (company name, billing address/shipping address, VAT number/EIN)

However, not all companies provide all of this information on their credit notes. Some do not include the payment terms or contact details. If the original invoice included VAT, you’ll have to issue a matching VAT credit note, which includes the details of the invoice along with the amount before VAT.

Make sure to clearly state at the top that the document is a credit note, not an invoice. This is to avoid any potential misunderstanding on the customer’s side. Issue the credit note within one month of the agreement between customer and vendor to reduce the invoice amount.

The easiest way to remember what a credit note is is to think about it as a negative invoice. They can be issued at any time.

Issuing Credit Notes

Invoicing software generally makes it easy to issue credit notes against any invoice with just a few clicks. The specific process varies depending on the software you’re using. In Quickbooks, for instance, you create a credit memo one of two ways.

  1. Click “Refunds and Credits” on the Quickbooks’ home page or
  2. Open the Customers menu and select “Create Memos/Refunds”

Either of these actions will open the Credit Memo window. You can deal with the amount of credit by:

  1. Issuing a refund – either as cash, check, or on a credit card
  2. Retaining the funds in the customer account.
  3. Applying it to the next open invoice.

Once you’ve opened the credit memo window, choose the correct Customer:Job and choose the merchandise to be returned. Repeat as needed for all items returned, then save and close. From there, the “Available Credit” window will open and you can select the option you want – to either have the credit applied to the account, issue a refund, or apply it to the next invoice.

If you use different accounting software, its help documentation can provide instructions on how to generate a credit note that automatically attaches to the existing invoice so it is given a unique number within your invoicing sequence.

Processing Credit Notes and Managing Bookkeeping

Denotes are different than standard profit-and-loss post so they need to be entered differently. How it is entered into the ledgers depends on whether you are the buyer or the seller.

Credit Memos in the Buyer’s Books

Any goods the buyer returns are considered purchase returns which decreases the liability they have to pay to the Creditor and decreases the expense previously incurred to purchase the goods. As such they are considered a debit or the creditors account and a credit to the purchase return account.

If the buyer hasn’t paid the seller yet, the credit note can reduce total liability. If the buyer, however, has already paid the entire amount of the invoice, the buyer can decide whether to use the credit note to offset future payments to the seller or they can use it as a demand for cash payment in exchange or the credit note.

In the buyer’s books, you should debit the creditor’s account to debit the decrease in liability and credit the purchase return account to credit the decrease in expense.

Credit Memos in the Seller’s Books

Goods returns to a seller are known as sales returns. By returning goods to a seller, it results in a decrease in revenue that was previously booked as sales,  as well as a decrease in assets since the debtor won’t be making the payment anymore.

As such it is a debit to the sales return account to decrease the revenue and a credit to the debtors account to decrease the assets.

Sellers should always review any open credit memos they have at the end of every reporting. To see if they can be linked to any open accounts receivable. This reduces the aggregate dollar amount of outstanding invoices and can be used to reduce payments to suppliers.

Invoicing a customer the wrong amount may happen from time to time, so creating and sending credit notes as easily as possible saves the finance team time and money when mistakes do occur. Using automated invoicing software helps improve your workflow efficiency. PLANERGY integrates with Quickbooks to simplify the invoicing process alongside the rest of the procure to pay process.

When goods are returned to the supplier the transaction is recorded in?

Conclusion. Thus the purchase return journal entries are recorded in the company's books of accounts when the goods purchased either on cash or credit are returned to the supplier of such goods.

In which of the following will the supplier be issuing a credit note?

As a seller, you may issue a credit note when there's a need to cancel all or part of an invoice for a variety of reasons, including: Changes to an order after an invoice is issued. Goods returned or services rejected. Goods were damaged during shipping.

Where is credit note recorded?

In traditional accounting practices, credit notes would be entered as a credit in the sales book for that particular customer (crediting their account for the specified amount). In double-entry bookkeeping systems, the credit note would be entered as debit under revenues, and credit under accounts receivable.

What is a credit note from a supplier?

A credit note, also known as a credit memorandum or a credit memo, is an official legal document, just like an invoice or a purchase order, that suppliers provide to customers to notify the customer that credit is being applied to their account for any number of reasons.