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oksana
New Member

What if you purchased some goods for my business in 2018 and returned them in 2019 from tax deduction perspective?

I purchased some goods for my business in 2018 with my bushiness bank account, but returned them in 2019. Should I report them as deductions in 2018 and income in 2019 return? May I just do not mention the transaction? If I do not mention, not sure how can I explain the credit transaction on my bank account if I'm on audit in 2019


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DanielV01
Expert Alumni

What if you purchased some goods for my business in 2018 and returned them in 2019 from tax deduction perspective?

If you use the cash method of accounting, you use the first method you mention in your question.  You do expense the item for 2018, and you report the refund as income in 2019.  With the cash method of accounting (which is the most common method for a small business), you count an expense when you pay it, and money received when you receive it.  If both the purchase and the return happen in the same year, it cancels out.  But when one year ends and another begins, this is the technically correct way to report this.

However, if you use the accrual method, it depends.  The refund is linked to the purchase, and the accrual method does not depend on when the money changed hands but when the exchange took place.  A refund nullifies a transaction, so if the item was returned quickly, (using the accrual method), you would be justified in not counting it in 2018 income.  Under audit, your accounting method would hold up to justify your treatment.

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1 Reply
DanielV01
Expert Alumni

What if you purchased some goods for my business in 2018 and returned them in 2019 from tax deduction perspective?

If you use the cash method of accounting, you use the first method you mention in your question.  You do expense the item for 2018, and you report the refund as income in 2019.  With the cash method of accounting (which is the most common method for a small business), you count an expense when you pay it, and money received when you receive it.  If both the purchase and the return happen in the same year, it cancels out.  But when one year ends and another begins, this is the technically correct way to report this.

However, if you use the accrual method, it depends.  The refund is linked to the purchase, and the accrual method does not depend on when the money changed hands but when the exchange took place.  A refund nullifies a transaction, so if the item was returned quickly, (using the accrual method), you would be justified in not counting it in 2018 income.  Under audit, your accounting method would hold up to justify your treatment.

**Say "Thanks" by clicking the thumb icon in a post
**Mark the post that answers your question by clicking on "Mark as Best Answer"
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