Originally posted by contractoralan
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Overpaid by agency? :-)
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Good point. Just thought - it costs me 29E to transfer to another euro account so if they want it back straight away they'll have to lose this.Rhyddid i lofnod psychocandy!!!! -
Simple view is to tell them and lose a day from the next invoice.Originally posted by psychocandy View PostGood point. Just thought - it costs me 29E to transfer to another euro account so if they want it back straight away they'll have to lose this.Comment
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No, you don't lose a day from the next invoice. If that is the case the discrepancy will be carried through the AR. (what a customer may have paid and when has no impact on what they should be invoiced; that is simply governed by the work undertaken).Originally posted by Sockpuppet View PostSimple view is to tell them and lose a day from the next invoice.
Sure you tell them, they pay the next invoice (minus the overpayment from this one) when its due and the accounts are correct. Given the OP is invoicing in Euro I'll pre-empt the next question with this link:
HM Revenue & Customs
Particularly the bit about partial payments (since that is what is happening in effect).
The overpayment is already reflected in the accounts (hopefully in a specific accounts receivable account for the customer) by virtue of the payment being entered.Comment
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Exactly what I said. Granted "lose a day" was a bit vague but the principle is the same.Originally posted by ASB View PostSure you tell them, they pay the next invoice (minus the overpayment from this one) when its due and the accounts are correct.Comment
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Either refund it or issue them with a credit note against your next invoice. That latter option is probably simpler and involves no actual money transfer.Comment
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Yep. Thanks. Sounds like the best option.Originally posted by craig1 View PostEither refund it or issue them with a credit note against your next invoice. That latter option is probably simpler and involves no actual money transfer.Rhyddid i lofnod psychocandy!!!!Comment
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If you did try to hold onto it you then have to falsify an invoice and then you're on dodgy ground.
An agency overpaid me £5,500 once. It took them nine months to realise !
I don't think you should credit it, the invoice is still valid, just the payment against that invoice is incorrect. If you credit it you'll be out of step with payments and invoices.Originally posted by craig1 View PostEither refund it or issue them with a credit note against your next invoice. That latter option is probably simpler and involves no actual money transfer.Comment
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If you receive an overpayment, and know (or should have known) that you have, if you simply keep it, you've committed theft.
For example, if you're overpaid by a few pounds, you might well not notice - at least until you did your account. If you're overpaid by a few thousand pounds then (unless you regularly receive huge sums into your account), you could be deemed to "should have known".
As soon as you notice the discrepancy, you're obliged to notify the agency. There's no moral grey area here, it's to do with whether you're happy committing theft.
Credit note is the easiest option all round in this case.Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!Comment
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Absolutely agree, a credit note will not solve the problem and will actually increase the difference. For example lets say the invoice is for £2500 and the payment is £3000. The account is sitting with a credit balance of £500. If you issue a credit note it will increase that credit balance to £1000, meaning you owe them £1000. You should issue a statement showing the invoice of £2500 and the payment of £3000 and reflecting the account balance of £500 credit.Originally posted by oversteer View PostI don't think you should credit it, the invoice is still valid, just the payment against that invoice is incorrect. If you credit it you'll be out of step with payments and invoices.Comment
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You're mixing up accrued and actual balances there. Using your example, you owe them £500 for the overpayment but this isn't reflected against anything in your books giving a mismatch of £500 when you reconcile accrued against actual. If you issue them a credit note for £500 then this formally reflects that you owe them £500 against the accrued books meaning you can reconcile these transactions.Originally posted by JamJarST View PostAbsolutely agree, a credit note will not solve the problem and will actually increase the difference. For example lets say the invoice is for £2500 and the payment is £3000. The account is sitting with a credit balance of £500. If you issue a credit note it will increase that credit balance to £1000, meaning you owe them £1000. You should issue a statement showing the invoice of £2500 and the payment of £3000 and reflecting the account balance of £500 credit.
If the next invoice is £2500 then they simply pay £2000 using the credit note for the other £500 meaning that your actual balance equals the genuine value of the invoices. Also makes their accounting easier.
If you're doing cash accounting and don't want to start going into accrued balances then you refund them the £500, hope they get it, credit it to your account and then pay the full invoice next time. Far simpler to do a credit note for both yours and their books.Comment
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