by Lopo » Wed Dec 27, 2017 10:54 pm
Judy, I use Quicken because I need to keep track of my. Usiness expenses. I don’t worry about balancing my account — I check my account online regularly — but at the end of ea h month, I have a few bookkeeping tasks with Quicken that makes filing taxes much easier. Here’s what I do:
As soon as my bank notifies me that my statement is available online, I sign in to my account and download it as a PDF.
THen I “export transactions” for the previous month, having i itially set up Quicekn for access to my accounts, which includes a couple of credit card accounts, too. That puts another file on my Desktop. I relabel each with the name of the month.
Then from Quicken, I select my bank account from the list on the left, and import the .qfx file I just downloaded.
Then I update my credit card accounts (which, already set up, accesses my card accounts and imports all transactions since my previous import.
When my checking a cout is updated. and all transactions “sucked in,” Quicekn has attempted to categorize them, ut this is the part that needs tweaking. I check each category, and with the page of my PDF statement, I review the few hand-written checks that are usually small photos om the statement, and enter the payee and correct category.
If I’ve kept up with this all year, then it’s eassy to view and print reports for each category of deductible expenses, ready to enter into whichever tax form you use. Other than allowing for the learning curve for Quicken, after 30-plus years of needing category reports for deductible expenses, it works well.