When Quicken Doesn't Balance
After you've been using Quicken for while and have been
balancing your account regularly, you will only irregularly have
trouble reconciling it. However, if you are just getting
started, you may have trouble getting your Quicken account to
balance. For that reason, let me offer some suggestions for
balancing a Quicken account that's causing you trouble.
Check for missing transactions
Account balance trouble stems from only three causes:
Reason 1: You cleared a transaction the bank hasn't recorded
Reason 2: You forgot to record a transaction, or perhaps several
transactions
Reason 3: Either you or your bank incorrectly recorded a
transaction
Therefore, when you find yourself with reconciliation troubles,
first make sure that you are not missing some transaction. Go
through the bank statement line for line, comparing each of the
transactions listed there with the contents of your account
register. If you find the bank statement lists a transaction
that your Money account register does not, then you need to
record it in Money.
Confirm you haven't incorrectly cleared transactions
Once you confirm that the Quicken account register includes all
transactions, verify that you have not incorrectly cleared
transactions that are still outstanding. To do this, thoroughly
review the Quicken account register and make sure that each
transaction marked with a "C" does, in fact, appear on the bank
statement.
Compare amounts
If the two reviews described in the preceding paragraphs don't
explain the difference between your records and the bank's, you
need to check the actual transaction amounts that you have
recorded against those shown in the bank register. In other
words, if the bank register shows a check to your mortgage
company for $500, you need to make sure that your account
register also records the check as $500.
Unfortunately, it is easy to incorrectly record transaction
amounts in the Quicken account register. All it takes is
pressing the wrong key. And, in fact, two data entry errors are
particularly difficult to see: transposition errors and sign
errors.
Watch for transpositions
Transposition errors occur when you transpose, or flip-flop, the
numbers in an amount. If you write a check for $123, but record
the check as $132, for example, you've transposed the 2 and the
3. And this error is hard to spot later. You look at the bank
statement, for example, and see the digits 123. Then when you
look at the account register, you see the digits 132. Unless you
are looking not just at the digits used but also at their order,
you may miss this error.
Watch for sign errors
Sign errors occur when you enter a deposit as a withdrawal, or a
withdrawal as a deposit. All this really means is that you have
entered some transaction amount in the wrong column. Again, this
error is sometimes tough to spot because the transaction appears
both on the bank statement and in your register--just in the
wrong column in the Quicken register.
If you come up with some difference with your records and the
bank's that is irreconcilable, try dividing the error by 2. Then
look for a transaction equal to this result. For example, if you
have a $200 error, divide $200 by 2 to get the result $100. Then
look for a $100 transaction that is entered in the wrong column.
Know the errors reconciliation won't catch
There are several common errors that account reconciliation
won't catch. Reconciliation won't catch when you forget to
record a transaction and the transaction hasn't yet cleared the
bank. If you forget to record a check and the check is still
outstanding at the end of the statement month, for example, the
check doesn't appear in your register and it doesn't get listed
on your bank statement.
Another kind of error that a bank reconciliation won't catch
stems from entering a fictitious transaction in the account
register. For example, if you enter a check in the Money account
register that you never wrote or a deposit you never made, the
check or deposit will never clear the bank.
Unfortunately, there is not much you can do to find these sorts
of errors. Mostly, you need to apply simple common sense to
prevent them. In the case of forgotten uncleared transactions,
your only recourse is to be careful in your record keeping. Try
to establish a system whereby you regularly record the checks
you write and the deposits you make.