Article Directory :: Business - General Articles

Setting Up QuickBooks for a Limited Liability Company

By Stephen Nelson

Subscribe to Stephen Nelson's RSS feed using any feed reader!

Republish: EasyPublish
Published: 12Jun2008
Word count: 683
Viewed: 958 time(s)
Bookmark this article using any bookmark manager!
Get Free Content For Your Site

Operating your business as a limited liability company? As you probably know, getting the QuickBooks accounting program setup correctly in your situation can be, well, tricky. But in a sense, that's a good thing. The trickiness stems from the tax accounting flexibility that the LLC option provides.

Fortunately, you can follow these three accounting tricks to keep your QuickBooks LLC setup under-control and well-organized.

Trick #1: Pretend the LLC Is Something Else

A limited liability company, for tax accounting purposes, is always treated as something else. For example, a one owner LLC operating a business is treated as a sole proprietorship. An LLC with multiple owners that operates a business is treated as a partnership.

What's more, both LLCs with a single owner and those with multiple owners can make elections to be treated for tax accounting purposes as regular corporations (called C corporations) or as Subchapter S corporations.

And all this leads to the first tip for setting up QuickBooks for an LLC. When you run the QuickBooks EasyStep Interview to setup QuickBooks, don't indicate that you're setting up QuickBooks for a limited liability company. Rather, indicate that you're setting up QuickBooks for the sort of taxpayer the LLC will be treated as.

For example, if you're a one owner LLC that hasn't made any special elections to be treated as a corporation, tell QuickBooks you're a sole proprietor. If you're a multiple owner LLC that hasn't made any special elections, tell QuickBooks that you're a partnership. And if you have made an election to be treated as a C corporation or an S corporation, tell QuickBooks that's what you are--a C corporation or an S corporation.

Trick #2: Combine Child and Parent LLCs in a Single QuickBooks Datafile

A common asset protection technique is to have a parent LLC or a parent corporation own child LLCs. A retailer with three locations, for example, might put each store location into a separate LLC. These three child LLCs might then be owned by a parent LLC or parent corporation.

Separate LLCs, however, shouldn't be segregated into separate QuickBooks datafiles. Rather, the LLC's accounts, income and deductions should be tracked within the parent's QuickBooks data file.

This combination seems (at first glance) just plain wrong. But here's the logic. In a parent-child structure, the child (so to speak) is owned by the parent. And that means that for tax accounting purposes, both the parent and the children combine their income and deductions. That combination means that both the parent LLC's and the child LLCs' income and deductions need to be combined into a single QuickBooks data file.

One caution, however. Because each LLC (whether parent or child) is a different legal entity, you should use separate QuickBooks accounts for each LLC's separate assets and liabilities.

For example, each LLC might have its own bank account within the QuickBooks data file. And each LLC should track its own accounts receivable, furniture and fixtures, and liabilities with separate, specific-to-that-LLC accounts.

Trick #3: Customize Forms for Each LLC as Necessary

If you're working with parent-children LLC situation, one other setup tip should be mentioned.

While for tax accounting purposes, you can and should combine the parent LLC and the child LLC transactions, you still want to recognize and visually highlight the separate legal identity of the parent LLC and of any child LLCs.

Within QuickBooks, an easy way to do this is to use separate customized forms for each LLC. An LLC with its own bank account will have its own check forms of course. And those check forms will have the LLC name on them.

But go a step further than that. If an LLC invoices customers or clients or sends a customer or client statements, that LLC should have its own customized invoice template or statement--one that uses that LLC's name.

Similarly, if an LLC issues purchase orders to vendors, that LLC should have its own purchase order template that uses the LLC's name.

Each QuickBooks form window includes boxes and buttons for creating customized forms.

A Seattle CPA, Steve Nelson wrote QuickBooks for Dummies. As a adjunct tax professor, he also taught the popular Golden Gate University graduate tax course, limited liability company versus s corporation, to accountants and attorneys

Bookmark this article using any bookmark manager! Subscribe to Stephen Nelson's RSS feed using any feed reader!

EasyPublish™ this article - publishers click here

More articles by Stephen Nelson

Free Report!
Ten Essential Secrets Of Article Marketing ... Grab Your Free
Copy
Now:




We respect your privacy.


Need Content?
Regular Top Quality Content for your Blog, Ezine or Website ...
Delivered Direct,
For Free!

Click For Details



Arts & Entertainment
Automotive
Business - General
Computers & Technology
Finance & Investment
Food & Drink
Health & Fitness
Home & Family
Internet Marketing/Online Business
Legal
Pets & Animals
Politics & Government
Reference & Education
Religion & Faith
Self-Improvement/Motivation
Social
Sports & Recreation
Travel & Leisure
Writing & Speaking

More business articles:

  • A Strategy for Running Effective Business Meetings (Thomas M Crea)
    Too often, business meetings are viewed as "unproductive". Effective business meetings require planning - Incorporate basic time management principles into your strategy.

  • Top 2 Cordless Rotary Hammers (Mallory Kramer)
    Benefit from the power and convenience of a cordless rotary hammer using the industry's very best models from Bosch and Makita.

  • Promotional Conference Folders And Why They Make Great Corporate Gifts (Francis Murphy)
    Promotional Folders distributed as business gifts offer a business a wonderful chance to promote their names or products.Read this article to learn more.

  • Explanation of LLC: What is an LLC, Why Create One, and How to Do Setup (Stephen Nelson)
    Seattle CPA Stephen L. Nelson answers the question, "what is an llc"?

  • CoSHH Assessment - The Fundamental Framework (Dale Allen)
    The article is looking at an essential CoSHH assessment structure to be followed by employers who have hazardous substances in their workplace.This is so as to protect the health of their employees. It is a tool which can be looked at as a means of guidance through the assessment process.

  • How does a holiday make you better at marketing and goal-setting? (Daniel Batten)
    A radical new look at how you can by-pass the "7 touch rule" in marketing and gain instant traction with customers, or by-pass "SMART" goal-setting and attain goals faster.

  • Foster Partnerships With the Competition (Maria Khalife)
    A really successful business person knows that competing cannot be factored into the formula for his or her success because they fence you in and limit what you can achieve due to this restriction.

  • Effective Postcard Advertising at Trade Shows (Luie De Von)
    Joining a trade show is one effective way to let people know about your business. In this article, learn how postcards can make your marketing plan more effective when handed out in a trade show.

  • Choosing a Heavy-Duty Portable Planer (Mallory Kramer)
    For the most heavy-duty portable planing, look no further than these models from Makita, Dewalt, and Steel City. Producing the finest high-performance planing in a conveniently portable package, these tools are designed to take the planing of heavy-duty craftsmen to an entirely new level.

We Automatically Distribute Articles
To Thousands Of Publishers And Web Sites:

Submit Article
All content is viewed and used by you at your own risk and we do not warrant the accuracy or reliability of any of the information. The views expressed are those of the individual contributing authors and not necessarily those of this web site, or its owner, Takanomi Limited.
 
Copyright © 2010 Takanomi Ltd. Company no. 5629683. All rights reserved. | Privacy | Legal | Contact Information