About Additional Cost Codes
You can use additional cost codes to identify the extra costs, such
as for shipping and handling, that your vendors or carriers charge on
the orders they send to you.
When you enter the codes with receipts, invoices,
credit notes, or debit notes, the corresponding information is displayed
for you to accept or change, as needed. More...
Creating Additional Cost Records
You choose
the Additional Costs icon from the Setup folder to create records for
the additional costs in your Purchase Orders system. Each record includes:
- A unique code of up to
six characters to identify the cost.
- An optional description
of the cost.
- The vendor number (optional). More...
Because you can create additional cost records by vendor number, you
can set up separate records for the additional costs assessed by particular
vendors. When you use one of these additional cost codes with a transaction,
the specified vendor number and associated tax group are automatically
displayed.
You can also set up additional cost codes without vendor numbers, then
use the code for any vendor, entering the vendor number and tax group
when using the cost in a transaction.
Tip: If you
use multicurrency accounting and you do not assign a vendor number to the
cost, you specify the currency in which you pay the cost. You can use
the code for all vendors who use the same currency.
If you assign a vendor number to a cost, the vendor's currency is displayed,
and you cannot change it.
- The amount of the cost (optional). More...
If you are creating an additional cost code for a standard charge, you
can enter the amount of the charge. When you select the additional cost
code for a transaction, the set amount is displayed, but you can change
it.
If the additional cost amount varies, you may prefer to leave the amount
at zero in the additional cost record, then enter the amount with each
transaction that uses the cost.
Note: If you
use multicurrency accounting, you type amounts in the currency specified
for the cost.
- The method by which you
prorate
the cost over items on a receipt. More...
You can choose to:
-
Expense the cost separately
from the items in the transaction (no proration).
-
Prorate the cost to item
details by quantity, cost, or weight.
Note: When you prorate a cost by quantity, the
program does not convert units of measure to stocking units. For example,
if you order 12 boxes and 12 single units of the same item on two separate
detail lines, the program prorates additional costs over 24 units, regardless
of how many single units are contained in a box.
-
Manually calculate and
add the costs to the item details in a receipt.
For documents created in version 5.3A or earlier multicurrency
ledgers, you can use this method only when the vendor for the transaction
uses the functional currency.
- The general ledger expense
account to which you post amounts for costs you expense (do not prorate).
- The method you use to
reprorate
additional costs that were prorated to items that you returned. More...
Use the Reproration field to specify whether to reallocate costs from
items you returned to other items on the same receipt.
You can choose to:
- Leave the additional cost
(that was prorated to the returned items) as originally allocated in the
receipt.
- Prorate the additional
cost from the returned items to the remaining items on the receipt.
- Expense the additional
cost that was originally prorated to returned items to a general ledger
account you specify in the additional cost record.
- The general ledger account
to which you post cost amounts on returns when you expense the costs (that
is, you do not prorate them).
- Optional field information
if you added fields to the Additional Cost screen.
- The tax authorities and
purchase tax classes that apply to the cost, if any. More...
If the cost is taxable,
you specify all the tax authorities and purchase tax classes that apply
to the cost, so that Purchase Orders can calculate correct tax amounts
for you when you enter transactions for the cost. When you prorate taxable
additional costs, the tax amount is added to the additional cost, then
the total amount is prorated.
You select from the tax authorities and purchase tax
classes you have set up for your company in the Tax Services screens in
Common Services.