About Retainage (Holdback) Accounting

If you use retainage accounting in Accounts Payable, Purchase Orders lets you account for retainage (or a holdback) that occurs when you withhold a percentage of an invoiced amount, usually by mutual agreement or according to a statute (such as a Builders Lien Act).

Note: You can only specify retainage if you are using Project and Job Costing and the transaction is job-related.

There are three steps in processing retainage:

  1. Process a receipt, invoice, debit note or credit note that specifies a holdback (retainage) for the document.
  2. Transfer the invoice or debit note with the retainage to Accounts Payable and post it in that program.
  3. Later, post a separate retainage invoice, debit note, or credit note to invoice the outstanding retainage amount.

Entering Original Documents with Retainage

An invoice, debit note, or credit note from which retainage is taken is called an original document.

You enter the receipt, invoice, debit note, or credit note using the standard P/O entry screens. To indicate that retainage applies to the document, however, you select the Job-Related option and the Retainage option.

Note: The Retainage option appears only if you selected the Retainage Accounting option for your Accounts Payable system.

The program then displays the Retainage tab for the entry screen, where you can specify:

Note: All tax amounts are included on the original retainage document. No tax amounts are included on the retainage invoice, debit note, or credit note that you process to clear the outstanding retainage amount.

Posting original invoices, debit notes, and credit notes

When you post the original retainage document in Accounts Payable, the program deducts the retainage from the document total, and posts the amount to the retainage control account.

For example, if you enter an invoice for $10,000 with 10% retainage, an invoice is posted for $9,000 with retainage outstanding of $1,000.

The retainage amount remains in the control account until you invoice it in accordance with:

  • The retention period or retainage due date specified for the invoice.
  • The number of days in advance specified on the A/P Options screen for generating retainage documents.

Adjusting Original Documents

Use Adjustment Entry in Accounts Payable to change retainage related to existing invoices, debit notes, and credit notes. When you post the adjustment, the program adjusts the outstanding retainage account.

Note that Accounts Payable does not calculate any retainage on adjustment transactions. You must enter the retainage manually, whether you are adding it for the first time, or adjusting existing retainage debits or credits.