Understanding VAT/Sales Tax in the NEOSYS finance module: Difference between revisions
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Aimed at staff with little or no prior experience in accounting. | Aimed at staff with little or no prior experience in accounting. | ||
First thing to understand is, companies keep their own account of both sides of a transaction with every party they transact with. | |||
This allows the company to know how much a client owes or how much the company owes a supplier without having to rely on the other party. | |||
Cardinal Double Entry Accounting Rules: | Cardinal Double Entry Accounting Rules: | ||
=== | ===Debits are Positive & Credits are Negative=== | ||
Burn to memory: | |||
Debit = DR notation = + | |||
Credit = CR notation = - | |||
You might be inclined to think that the word "debit" is similar to "debt" and should also be viewed as bad/negative/owed. Credit should be viewed as good/positive/owned. This is not the case in accounting. | |||
Why is a debit and credit card given those names? Debit card +1000 (OWNED), Credit credit -1000 (OWED/Loan). | |||
The | ===The Double Entry Principle=== | ||
For every debit there must be an equal credit meaning that transaction must effect at least two accounts and the sum of the amounts must equal 0. | |||
<pre> | |||
E.g Agency orders and receives 10 apples worth $5 from supplierX. | |||
Inventory A/c DR +$5. | |||
Supplier A/c CR -$5. | |||
Balance = 0. | |||
+ | <pre> | ||
E.g Agency pays supplierX $5 for apples owed. | |||
Bank A/c CR - $5. | |||
Supplier A/c DR + $5. | |||
Balance = 0. | |||
</pre> | |||
Double entry is important because it has allowed accountants to divide and account an amount into many accounts. For example if a | |||
For example, when the Agency pays the supplier $5 (inc TAX) but now we have to account for how VAT tax we pay and what is the cost without VAT. | |||
<pre> | |||
Supplier A/c CR - $5 + (5% tax) = $5.125 | |||
Cost of Fruit A/c Dr + $5 | |||
VAT A/c DR + $0.125 | |||
Balance = 0. | |||
</pre> | |||
See how we now have 3 accounts all recording useful info, and all transactions sum to 0. | |||
Another reason why all transactions must equate to zero, is to ensure unintentional mistakes such as a mistype are detected. If the system balance of all transactions is not equal to zero then you know you've made an error. | |||
===Assets = Liabilities + Equity=== | ===Assets = Liabilities + Equity=== | ||
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Assets A/c record resources owned by the company. They have future economic value that can be measured and can be expressed in currency. | Assets A/c record resources owned by the company. They have future economic value that can be measured and can be expressed in currency. | ||
- Examples a/cs include cash, investments, accounts receivable (money owed by clients), inventory, supplies, buildings, furniture and equipment. | |||
Examples a/cs include cash, investments, accounts receivable (money owed by clients), inventory, supplies, buildings, furniture and equipment. | - Assets = Liabilities + Equity | ||
Assets = Liabilities + Equity | |||
Liability A/c record monetary obligations the company own. They too are measured and can be expressed in currency. | Liability A/c record monetary obligations the company own. They too are measured and can be expressed in currency. | ||
Examples a/cs include loans, accounts payable (money owed to suppliers), staff salaries and Income tax payable. | - Examples a/cs include loans, accounts payable (money owed to suppliers), staff salaries and Income tax payable. | ||
Liabilities = Assets - Equity | - Liabilities = Assets - Equity | ||
Equity A/c record the owner/ shareholders interest in the company assets. In other words, upon liquidation after all the liabilities are paid off, the shareholders own the remaining assets. | Equity A/c record the owner/ shareholders interest in the company assets. In other words, upon liquidation after all the liabilities are paid off, the shareholders own the remaining assets. | ||
This is why equity is often referred to as "net assets" or "assets minus liabilities". | This is why equity is often referred to as "net assets" or "assets minus liabilities". | ||
Equity = Assets - Liabilities | Equity = Assets - Liabilities | ||
Revision as of 09:01, 6 September 2018
Handling VAT/Sales Tax
VAT and/or Sales tax is handled in NEOSYS Finance Module by an additional pair of columns on any of the Journals. These two columns are "Tax Code" and "Tax Amount".
On sales journals and cash receipt journals these columns represent Sales or VAT collected and payable to tax authorities. On purchase or journals or cash payment journals these columns represent VAT tax paid on purchases, which is recoverable from tax authorities.
The amounts in these additional columns are posted as an additional separate line on the vouchers and into a fixed VAT/Tax Control A/c, which is defined in the Chart of Accounts.
NEOSYS billing systems automatically create journals with the correct tax codes and amounts in these additional columns.
NEOSYS has a special VAT/Tax report that shows the total amount of tax per journal and per tax code per period. This report provides a breakdown analysis of the VAT/Tax A/c movements and also can be checked versus the VAT/Tax summary, which is printed at the bottom of all the journal audit reports. There is therefore a three level verifiable control over the tax transactions and reports, which cannot be broken by operator error.
Configuring NEOSYS to handle VAT/Sales Tax
Creating "VAT Input", "VAT Output" and "VAT Tax Payments" A/cs
These should be somewhere in the Current Liabilities section of the chart of accounts.
You must create THREE a/cs, one for the VAT Tax Control INPUT, which will represent the tax paid on purchases which are recoverable from tax authorities, one for VAT Tax Control OUTPUT, which will represent the tax collected and payable to the authorities, and one for the VAT Tax Payments which will represent the payments made to the authorities YTD.
NEOSYS billing systems will automatically post all tax into the VAT Tax Control A/cs. Manual journals will not be allowed so that the Tax column on journals can be verified against the VAT Tax Control A/cs.
All payments to the Tax authorities should be debited to the VAT Tax Payments A/c. Therefore the net of the three a/cs is the current tax liability.
Make sure that the "Closing A/c Code" of the VAT input and VAT output accounts is the VAT Tax Payments A/c (here VATP). Therefore, every year, the opening balance for the VAT Input and VAT Output A/cs will be zero and the VAT Tax Payments A/c will be the net tax payable from the prior year.
Defining the Tax Codes
This is to be done in Finance > Files > Tax Rate File and is applicable to all companies.
VAT on sales (output) MUST be separated from VAT on purchases (input) using a blank line as shown below, so that the VAT statement report correctly identifies "VAT collected on outputs" and "VAT on inputs"
Set VAT/Tax registration number in Company file
Set VAT/Tax registration number on letter head
Making tax columns appear on the Journals
In Journal Setup make sure the tax columns are suitably titled for the relevant journals.
NOTE: On sales journals and cash receipt journals, these columns represent Sales or VAT collected and payable to tax authorities. On purchase or journals or cash payment journals, these columns represent VAT tax paid on purchases which are recoverable from tax authorities.
Check the columns now exist on the relevant journal(s).
Accounting entries
Invoice/Credit notes Journal
Client A/C Dr. + 126 Income A/c Cr. - 120 VAT Control A/C Cr. - 6 Cost A/C Dr. + 100 Accrual A/C Cr. - 100 (Schedule/Job A/C)
Purchase Invoice/Media Purchase Invoice Journal
Cost A/C Cr. - 100 Accrual A/C Dr. + 100 (Schedule/Job A/C) Cost A/C Dr. + 100 VAT Control A/C Dr. + 5 Supplier A/c Cr. - 105
Receipt Journal
Bank A/C Dr. + 126 Client A/C Cr. - 126
Payment Journal
Bank A/C Cr. - 105 Supplier A/c Dr. + 105
Payment Journal
VAT Payable A/c Dr. + 1 Bank A/c Cr. - 1
Understanding Double-Entry Accounting
Aimed at staff with little or no prior experience in accounting.
First thing to understand is, companies keep their own account of both sides of a transaction with every party they transact with. This allows the company to know how much a client owes or how much the company owes a supplier without having to rely on the other party.
Cardinal Double Entry Accounting Rules:
Debits are Positive & Credits are Negative
Burn to memory: Debit = DR notation = + Credit = CR notation = -
You might be inclined to think that the word "debit" is similar to "debt" and should also be viewed as bad/negative/owed. Credit should be viewed as good/positive/owned. This is not the case in accounting.
Why is a debit and credit card given those names? Debit card +1000 (OWNED), Credit credit -1000 (OWED/Loan).
The Double Entry Principle
For every debit there must be an equal credit meaning that transaction must effect at least two accounts and the sum of the amounts must equal 0.
E.g Agency orders and receives 10 apples worth $5 from supplierX. Inventory A/c DR +$5. Supplier A/c CR -$5. Balance = 0. <pre> E.g Agency pays supplierX $5 for apples owed. Bank A/c CR - $5. Supplier A/c DR + $5. Balance = 0.
Double entry is important because it has allowed accountants to divide and account an amount into many accounts. For example if a For example, when the Agency pays the supplier $5 (inc TAX) but now we have to account for how VAT tax we pay and what is the cost without VAT.
Supplier A/c CR - $5 + (5% tax) = $5.125 Cost of Fruit A/c Dr + $5 VAT A/c DR + $0.125 Balance = 0.
See how we now have 3 accounts all recording useful info, and all transactions sum to 0.
Another reason why all transactions must equate to zero, is to ensure unintentional mistakes such as a mistype are detected. If the system balance of all transactions is not equal to zero then you know you've made an error.
Assets = Liabilities + Equity
This formula represents the relationship between the assets, liabilities, and owners' equity of a business.
Assets A/c record resources owned by the company. They have future economic value that can be measured and can be expressed in currency. - Examples a/cs include cash, investments, accounts receivable (money owed by clients), inventory, supplies, buildings, furniture and equipment. - Assets = Liabilities + Equity
Liability A/c record monetary obligations the company own. They too are measured and can be expressed in currency. - Examples a/cs include loans, accounts payable (money owed to suppliers), staff salaries and Income tax payable. - Liabilities = Assets - Equity
Equity A/c record the owner/ shareholders interest in the company assets. In other words, upon liquidation after all the liabilities are paid off, the shareholders own the remaining assets. This is why equity is often referred to as "net assets" or "assets minus liabilities". Equity = Assets - Liabilities