QuickBooks HelpQuickBooksHelpIntuit

Learn the difference between bills, checks, and expenses in QuickBooks Online

SOLVEDby QuickBooks5194Updated December 28, 2023

Learn how to handle bills to be paid later and bills to be paid immediately using bills, checks, or expenses. You can find these in the + New menu in your QuickBooks Online account.

When to enter bills

  • Enter bills from vendors to accurately report your Accounts Payable, especially if you run your reports on an accrual basis.
  • If tracking Vendor balances, entering bills is essential for knowing how much you owe your vendors.
  • Record a bill for any services or items received that you will pay for later - whether or not there is an actual bill received from the vendor.

For example, when you receive your electric bill, which is not due until the end of the month, use Bill to track what you owe. Then, use Pay bills to clear the bill and generate the check.

Learn how to enter bills to keep track of your payables.

When to enter bill payments

  • If you originally recorded a bill in QuickBooks, use Pay bills to close the bill. You can print a bill payment check or pay via credit card.
  • Entering a bill payment through Pay bills ensures that the Vendor balance decreases appropriately.
  • Using Check or Expense may cause the bill to still show unpaid on your reports.
  • If you paid a bill via electronic payment, enter EFT in the Check no. field.

Learn how to record a bill payment check or pay a bill using credit or debit card.

When to record checks or expenses

  • Both Check and Expense report a transaction as an expense and a payment simultaneously.
  • While Bills are for payables (received services or items to be paid later) Check and Expenses are for services or items paid on the spot.
  • If you need to print a check, record an expense as a Check, instead of an Expense.
  • If you paid something via credit card, use Expense.
  • If you paid something via EFT, you should still use Check or Expense. You can enter EFT in the Check no. field.

As an example, if you bought supplies at Office Depot and immediately paid for them, record the transaction using Check or Expense. You can skip entering and paying bills, because there's no money owed to Office Depot.

Get help with entering a Check or Expense.

Note: If your preferred delivery method for a customer is set to 'Print later', the Expense will save as a Check.

To check this, go to your customer's profile, then select Edit. Go to the Payments section and verify that the preferred delivery method is not set to Print later.

Was this helpful?

You must sign in to vote, reply, or post
QuickBooks Online AdvancedQuickBooks Online EssentialsQuickBooks Online PlusQuickBooks Online Simple Start

Sign in for the best experience

Ask questions, get answers, and join our large community of QuickBooks users.

More like this