QuickBooks Online Cheat Sheet
Updated: December 2025
How to use this: Different clients have different bookkeeping setups. Use the sections that match how you run your books (cash vs. invoicing, whether you track bills, whether you collect sales tax, etc.).
#Daily / Weekly Must-Dos
- Check Banking feed: Review new transactions, add payees, and apply rules.
- Categorize transactions: Assign the correct account + class/location (if used).
- Match vs. Add:
- Match when the bank transaction already exists (invoice payment, bill payment, sales receipt).
- Add when it’s a new transaction that isn’t in QBO yet.
- Review Undeposited Funds: Clear out old items and confirm deposits match the bank.
- Run a quick health check:
- Profit & Loss (month to date)
- Balance Sheet (month to date)
- A/R Aging and A/P Aging
#Month-End Close (Fast Checklist)
- Reconcile bank and credit card accounts (every account, every month).
- Review uncategorized transactions: “Is this business or personal?” Confirm meals, travel, supplies, software, subcontractors.
- Review A/R (Accounts Receivable): Send reminders, apply late fees (if policy allows), confirm payments are posted correctly.
- Review A/P (Accounts Payable): Confirm bills entered, due dates correct, and payments recorded.
- Payroll check (if applicable): Verify payroll liabilities and tax payments.
- Sales tax check (if applicable): Confirm tax settings and taxable vs. non-taxable items.
- Review Balance Sheet accounts:
- Bank/Credit Cards: reconciled.
- Loans: principal vs. interest split.
- Fixed assets: purchases categorized correctly (not expensed if they should be capitalized).
- Owner’s draws/distributions: posted consistently.
- Close the books (optional but recommended): Set a closing date + password after reconciliation and review.
#Banking Feed: Common Moves
- Create rules for recurring vendors (software subscriptions, utilities).
- Use Payee rules to standardize vendor names.
- Split transactions when one bank charge includes multiple categories.
- Watch for duplicates: Duplicate happens when you “Add” something that already exists as a bill payment/invoice payment.
#Core Transaction Types (When to Use What)
- Invoice: You bill a customer now, they pay later. (Creates A/R)
- Sales receipt: Customer pays immediately. (No A/R)
- Receive payment: Records payment against an invoice.
- Estimate: Quote that can convert to an invoice.
- Expense: Money out, paid immediately (card/cash).
- Bill: Money out, to be paid later. (Creates A/P)
- Bill payment: Pays an existing bill.
- Journal entry: Use sparingly (adjustments, accruals, corrections). Prefer forms when possible.
#Chart of Accounts (COA) Quick Guide
- Income: Sales, service income, other income.
- Cost of Goods Sold (COGS): Direct costs tied to revenue (materials, subcontractors for job).
- Expenses: Operating costs (rent, software, advertising).
- Assets: Bank, A/R, fixed assets, inventory.
- Liabilities: Credit cards, loans, A/P, sales tax payable, payroll liabilities.
- Equity: Owner’s equity, draws/distributions, retained earnings.
#Common Categorization Cheats
- Owner pay / personal spending: Owner’s Draw (sole prop/LLC) or Distributions (S-Corp) — not an expense.
- Meals: Meals (often partially deductible; keep notes).
- Travel: Travel (airfare, hotel) vs. Meals while traveling.
- Software: Subscriptions / Software.
- Contractors: Subcontractors (track for 1099s).
- Equipment: Small tools may be supplies; larger purchases may be fixed assets (confirm with your tax pro).
#Reconciliation: What “Good” Looks Like
- Reconcile every bank and credit card monthly.
- Ending balance in QBO reconciliation should equal the statement ending balance.
- If off:
- Check statement date range.
- Look for missing/duplicate transactions.
- Confirm transfers are recorded once (not twice).
#Undeposited Funds (UF) Basics
- Use UF when you receive multiple payments and deposit them as one lump sum.
- Workflow:
- Record payments to Undeposited Funds.
- Create a Bank Deposit that matches the bank deposit exactly.
- If deposits don’t match the bank, you’ll fight reconciliation.
#Accounts Receivable (A/R) & Accounts Payable (A/P)
- A/R Aging: Who owes you and how long.
- A/P Aging: What you owe and when.
- Best practice: Don’t use A/R or A/P unless you’re actually invoicing/billing.
#Sales Tax (Quick Notes)
- Set up correct tax agency, rates, and taxable products/services.
- Run the Sales Tax Center regularly.
- Don’t “fix” sales tax with journal entries unless you know exactly why.
#Reports You’ll Use Constantly
- Profit & Loss (monthly, YTD)
- Balance Sheet
- Statement of Cash Flows
- General Ledger
- Transaction Detail by Account
- A/R Aging Summary and A/P Aging Summary
- Reconciliation Reports (save PDFs)
#Cleanup / Troubleshooting Shortcuts
- Find duplicates: Search by amount/date/vendor; review Banking tab matches.
- Negative balances:
- A/R negative: payments posted without invoices or to wrong customer.
- A/P negative: bill payments without bills.
- Ask “where did it hit?” Open the transaction and look at the account/category and linked transactions.
- Use Audit Log: Great for tracking changes.
#Best Practices
- Keep receipt backup (attach to transactions).
- Use consistent naming for vendors/customers.
- Reconcile monthly and lock the books.
- Keep a “Questions for Client” list during categorization to avoid constant back-and-forth.
#Quick Client Questions (Copy/Paste)
- “Is this expense business-related? If yes, what was it for?”
- “Was this payment for an invoice, or a new sale?”
- “Is this a transfer between accounts, or a vendor payment?”
- “Should this be reimbursed to you personally, or treated as owner draw/distribution?”
#What I Need From You Each Month (Client Checklist)
- Bank/credit card statements (or confirm feeds are complete)
- Any cash transactions not in the bank feed
- Notes on unusual purchases
- Loan statements (if applicable)
- Payroll reports (if applicable)