Commercial real estate accounting has its own rhythm. The good news is that QuickBooks can handle they day-to-day aspects when it is structured correctly. In this introduction, the author tells you "what you need to know" about setting up QuickBooks for real estate accounting.
Commercial real estate (CRE) accounting has its own rhythm: rent rolls and renewals, common area maintenance (CAM) reconciliations, security deposits, tenant improvements, intercompany loans - the list goes on. The good news? QuickBooks can handle day-to-day tasks with ease when structured correctly.
Whether you or your clients manage a handful of retail properties or a portfolio of office, industrial, and mixed-use properties, the correct setup turns QuickBooks into a reliable back office for owners, managers, and their accountants. Below is a practical framework you can put in place.
Your chart of accounts does the heavy lifting. Please keep it clean and property-centric. Clearly delineate your expense accounts between those that are overhead, operating, and reimbursable.
Revenue
QuickBooks isn’t a dedicated property management system, so your data model matters.
This mapping provides you with property-level P&Ls and tenant-level receivables, eliminating the need for double entry.
Set up Products & Services (Income Items) for every recurring or billable charge:
Point each income item to the correct income account. Now you can create recurring invoices per tenant. When base rent increases on the anniversary, adjust the template rather than rebuilding from scratch. A property management solution would help remove this need for recurring invoices.
During the year, ensure that reimbursable expenses are posted to the correct Class (and subclass if appropriate) and reimbursable expense account. At year-end:
Create a simple capitalization policy for materiality and useful lives.
Day-to-day repairs and maintenance (R&M) are recorded as expenses.
Roof replacements, structural upgrades, and major tenant build-outs are recorded to Construction in Progress and then moved to Fixed Assets.
Depreciation is typically handled with periodic adjusting entries from the accountant’s fixed asset schedule.
At a minimum, deliver these each month (by property):
If you need an actual rent roll, complex CAM automation, intercompany eliminations, or portfolio-wide consolidation, this is where a specialized CRE app earns its keep.One option many firms use alongside QuickBooks is STRATAFOLIO, which streamlines rent schedules, lease escalation tracking, 1-click CAM reconciliation, tenant certificate of insurance tracking, and a tenant portal, all syncing to your books.
Footnotes and Disclosures:
* - NNN is the abbreviation for "Triple Net" lease agreements. "Triple net" refers to three expense categories that the tenant must pay, in addition to their base rent. These include Net Property Taxes, Net Insurance and Net CAM.
Feature content adapted from an article submission by Jeri Frank. This adapted Insightful Accountant content is provided for informational and educational purposes.
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