Practice Management Benefits of QuickBooks Ledger for tax accountants Read the Article Open Share Drawer Share this:Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) Written by Amanda Thompson Modified Jan 3, 2024 5 min read In November, Intuit launched QuickBooks® Ledger, a low-cost product solution to pull low-complexity clients out of the wasteland and provide a secure landing place within QuickBooks Online Accountant (QBOA) for clients at all levels. The benefits of Ledger for bookkeeping and tax advisory are clear, but why is this product noteworthy for tax accountants? Let’s dive into specifics about Ledger and why it is worth consideration. What does QuickBooks Ledger do? Ledger is an accountant-only offering through QBOA designed to serve clients with basic, low-complexity accounting needs. Ledger is not a bookkeeping or accounting system, but is meant to work in conjunction with QBOA. The automation in Ledger allows your team to maintain their current QuickBooks-based workflows; categorize, collect, and organize a client’s financial information; route for proper approvals; and pass the information from bookkeeping to tax. Who is the ideal client for QuickBooks Ledger? It’s said tongue-in-cheek, but “shoebox” clients have never fit well in tax or bookkeeping software systems. Their needs and engagements often do not necessarily scale to the functions of larger product offerings. QuickBooks Ledger is designed with these clients in mind: In-house bookkeeping clients. After-the-fact clients. Basic write-up clients. Tax-only clients. Multi-company clients with non-operating entities or holding companies. High-net-worth individuals. These industry verticals may be a good fit, especially if the clients have minimal or infrequent transactions: Real estate (property management). Trust and estate. Single asset/investor funds. I get why Ledger is important for bookkeepers and CAS professionals, but what are the upsides for tax accountants? What is the dream of all accountants? Clean data. Quality data. Client organizers completed with reliable, readable documents. A trial balance that ties. By taking the data entry work for the lower-complex clients into Ledger and out of spreadsheets, the changes, adjustments, and reconciliations are less manual, with workflows in place to ensure greater accuracy. In addition, some accountants and teams offer bookkeeping, accounting, advisory, and tax preparation. For other firms, these teams are separate. The seamless passing of client information from one group or individual to another is possible using QBOA firm user access. Through QBOA, Ledger can be mapped to Intuit ProConnect™ Tax. Ledger is also beneficial for small Schedule C taxpayers, passive rentals, and holding companies when considering the bookkeeping to tax transition. Requirements for 1099s, such as adding vendors and mapping transactions back to those vendors, can also be managed in Ledger. 1099s can also be filed from Ledger using QuickBooks Payroll 1099 or exported to other 1099 software. What is the integration with tax software? Trial balances produced in Ledger can be synced to ProConnect Tax or exported to other tax software. Clients do not have access to this software, correct? This is a product offering designed for you, not your clients. Ledger is only offered through QBOA. However, a client can be added as primary admin on the subscription (see below) to allow access to review transactions, connect bank feeds, collect documents, and run reports. The runway is there for clients to grow into QuickBooks Online product offerings that support their changing needs. How do I give my clients access? If you would like to add your client as the primary admin on the Ledger subscription, during the “Add Client” process, do NOT select “Make me the primary admin” checkbox. By default, your client is the primary admin when they first sign in to QuickBooks. You’ll be the primary admin until their first login. Don’t worry; even if your client is the primary admin, you’ll still get the billing notifications and your client won’t be able to access your billing information. You’ll also remain on their Ledger subscription as one of the QBOA admin users. If you’ve taken the primary admin role for the Ledger file, you’ll need to contact Support and submit a Primary Admin Change Request to transfer the permissions to your client. You will still have full access as one of the QBOA admin users. Can we talk about cost and billing? Ledger is $10 per month per subscription and is billed through firm billing. There is no direct client billing, and the client cannot directly subscribe to Ledger. What about bank feeds? Will the information need to be added manually? Some banks and credit card companies can provide accountant credentials to connect the feeds without the client having to be on Ledger. In the event your client doesn’t bank with one that offers accountant credentials, your client could be added to Ledger to connect their bank feeds as detailed above. If none of the options are available for the client, a .csv file can be uploaded, or you can use a third-party app or manually enter transactions. So Ledger does not only have to be used at year-end? It can be used anytime! A client’s financial information can be prepared for month-end, quarterly, or annual—any period. Ledger is not simply a year-end product, although it does make year-end work much more seamless. I like how my spreadsheets are set up. Convince me why Ledger is better. Workflow and process consistency are crucial for an accountant’s day-to-day work, but are especially important at the end of the year through January. Because Ledger adds the serviced clients to QBOA as all other QuickBooks clients, switching costs and access delays can be reduced. Out-of-flow approvals are also reduced. Once the bookkeeping is finalized and reviewed, Ledger can be automatically synced with ProConnect Tax. The employees who work with these clients are not in QBOA because they typically do not need to be. How will this work? This may be trickier for larger practices and firms with separate tax teams, but given the automated capabilities of Ledger and how transacting data can move seamlessly, it may be worth considering granting access to other teams using client file access controls in the QBOA. Find more information on QuickBooks Ledger, including how to add clients or how to set up a time to speak to a member of the QuickBooks team. Previous Post Tax product updates for tax year 2023 Next Post Get in the cloud: ProConnect™ Tax + QuickBooks® Online Written by Amanda Thompson Amanda Thompson works on the Intuit Accountant team, developing content relevant to the accounting industry. Prior to joining Intuit, Amanda worked in marketing at a Top-40 accounting firm where she developed and amplified the firm’s digital presence and thought leadership content. She has also created content for national brands, code schools, and nonprofits. More from Amanda Thompson Follow Amanda Thompson on Twitter. Comments are closed. Browse Related Articles Tax Law and News Annual inflation adjustments for TY24 and TY25 Practice Management Intuit is committed to your success Practice Management Lacerte® Tax spotlight: Karl J. Strube, CPA Practice Management ProConnect™ Tax Online spotlight: Alejandra Matias Practice Management ProConnect Tax Virtual Bootcamp: Jan. 15-16 Webinars Navigating Common IRS Red Flags: Jan. 20 Webinars Pay-by-Refund: Jan. 20 Webinars Practical Security Checklist: Jan. 14 Tax Law and News January 2025 tax and compliance deadlines Workflow tools On the Books podcast: Merry books-to-tax season