A few YNAB questions

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP, the YNAB subreddit is a great resource. Just search for the credit card topic and there are lots of old threads on it.

For reimbursable expenses we just enter it as normal and then enter the reimbursement as inflow directly to that category. As a result the transactions offset and look like $0 spending for that category.

Oh man, if you can believe it - I have never used Reddit. I don’t know if I should break the seal I have enough terrible online habits as it is

I don't use Reddit much but the YNAB subreddit is good.


Yeah, it’s unnaturally friendly and supportive for Reddit haha
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Or better yet, I can explain how credit cards work! Let me know if you have a specific aspect you’d like clarified


Can you make it pull itemized credit card charges, like Mint/Quicken, etc? I couldn’t figure out a way to do that and it was a dealbreaker for me. I don’t know how anybody sits down and enters every $4.50 drink charge line by line.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Or better yet, I can explain how credit cards work! Let me know if you have a specific aspect you’d like clarified


Can you make it pull itemized credit card charges, like Mint/Quicken, etc? I couldn’t figure out a way to do that and it was a dealbreaker for me. I don’t know how anybody sits down and enters every $4.50 drink charge line by line.


I haven’t used Mint in 10+ years so I can’t speak to it specifically but you can link your CC account to YNAB and it’ll pull in transactions. I have our accounts linked but still manually enter everything. It takes like 5 seconds on the mobile app. Easy peasy.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Or better yet, I can explain how credit cards work! Let me know if you have a specific aspect you’d like clarified


Yes, don’t go back to Reddit for me thank you for the offer!! I’ll try to respond here or page you when I have an actual specific question. Thank u again!


No, I love talking about You Need a Budget (YNAB)! My wife and I have been using it for five years and I've helped family members get on board with it. I'll do my best to explain the credit card (CC) system in its basics here.

YNAB's system uses both Accounts and Categories. Accounts represent real world accounts where you money sits, Categories in your budget are the "jobs" you've given those real world dollars in YNAB. A CC account is basically just an account with a negative balance and the CC payment category is the category where dollars you've assigned the "pay off your CC" job are located. And YNAB's system is so slick it moves these dollars around seamlessly.

An Example

Let's say you have $1,000 in your checking account. You have a credit card account you've just paid off so it has a $0 balance. And in your budget you've assigned $250 to your grocery category.

You go to Whole Foods and spend $100 on groceries, here's what happens:

1. You enter the transaction in YNAB - Whole Foods is the payee, Groceries is the category, and your CC is the account
2. When you hit enter $100 moves from your Grocery category to your CC category - so now your grocery category has $150 ($250 less $100), your CC category has $100 in it, your CC account now has a ($100) balance (that's negative $100), and your checking account balance is unchanged at $1,000
3. Now you go to your CC's website and pay it off using your checking account. In YNAB you go to your CC account and click 'Record Payment' and the amount that pops up will be equal to what you have in that CC category (but you can manually change this to whatever payment amount you're making). When you hit enter your checking account will go down by $100, your CC account will go from negative $100 to $0, and your CC category will go from $100 to $0.

I don't know if that helps at all but basically spending money on a credit card will make your CC account more and more negative and YNAB will move the money from the category you spent from into the CC payment category. Paying the CC off is just transferring money from your checking account to your CC account.

Everything is right with the world if the total amount assigned to your categories is equal to the amount in your cash accounts (like checking) and your CC payment category has the same amount as your CC account (but opposite, if you have a negative $100 balance you'll have positive $100 in your CC payment category)

This assumes you're paying your CC off each month, things work the same but it's a bit different if you spend more on CC than you have money in the bank.

Anyway, hope this helps! Happy to answer specific questions if you think of any.


The bolded is 100% the step I’m missing. I’ll try to figure it out tomorrow morning. And I’ll also try to stop being annoyed about the negative balance showing for the CC balance. Now I think I understand if I can get your step 1 right it will clear that up. Thanks again! I will def report back tomorrow.

I will need to get to your step 3 eventually but I haven’t gotten that far yet. I do pay it off each month so let’s hope it doesn’t get more complicated for me. Thank you again!!!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I stopped using it because it can't handle credit cards. I don't know how people do it.


It handles credit cards beautifully, perhaps you don’t understand it.


You're right, I'm stupid.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I stopped using it because it can't handle credit cards. I don't know how people do it.


It handles credit cards beautifully, perhaps you don’t understand it.


You're right, I'm stupid.


The biggest issue with YNAB's handling of credit cards is the learning curve. You're definitely not alone in your frustration there. But once it clicks for you it really is brilliant.

If you have any specific questions around YNAB's handling of credit cards I'm happy to help. Alternatively I know tons of people love Nick True's video on the subject (and all things YNAB related) if you have 30 minutes

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Ix0Jibc0Lw
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Or better yet, I can explain how credit cards work! Let me know if you have a specific aspect you’d like clarified


Yes, don’t go back to Reddit for me thank you for the offer!! I’ll try to respond here or page you when I have an actual specific question. Thank u again!


No, I love talking about You Need a Budget (YNAB)! My wife and I have been using it for five years and I've helped family members get on board with it. I'll do my best to explain the credit card (CC) system in its basics here.

YNAB's system uses both Accounts and Categories. Accounts represent real world accounts where you money sits, Categories in your budget are the "jobs" you've given those real world dollars in YNAB. A CC account is basically just an account with a negative balance and the CC payment category is the category where dollars you've assigned the "pay off your CC" job are located. And YNAB's system is so slick it moves these dollars around seamlessly.

An Example

Let's say you have $1,000 in your checking account. You have a credit card account you've just paid off so it has a $0 balance. And in your budget you've assigned $250 to your grocery category.

You go to Whole Foods and spend $100 on groceries, here's what happens:

1. You enter the transaction in YNAB - Whole Foods is the payee, Groceries is the category, and your CC is the account
2. When you hit enter $100 moves from your Grocery category to your CC category - so now your grocery category has $150 ($250 less $100), your CC category has $100 in it, your CC account now has a ($100) balance (that's negative $100), and your checking account balance is unchanged at $1,000
3. Now you go to your CC's website and pay it off using your checking account. In YNAB you go to your CC account and click 'Record Payment' and the amount that pops up will be equal to what you have in that CC category (but you can manually change this to whatever payment amount you're making). When you hit enter your checking account will go down by $100, your CC account will go from negative $100 to $0, and your CC category will go from $100 to $0.

I don't know if that helps at all but basically spending money on a credit card will make your CC account more and more negative and YNAB will move the money from the category you spent from into the CC payment category. Paying the CC off is just transferring money from your checking account to your CC account.

Everything is right with the world if the total amount assigned to your categories is equal to the amount in your cash accounts (like checking) and your CC payment category has the same amount as your CC account (but opposite, if you have a negative $100 balance you'll have positive $100 in your CC payment category)

This assumes you're paying your CC off each month, things work the same but it's a bit different if you spend more on CC than you have money in the bank.

Anyway, hope this helps! Happy to answer specific questions if you think of any.


The bolded is 100% the step I’m missing. I’ll try to figure it out tomorrow morning. And I’ll also try to stop being annoyed about the negative balance showing for the CC balance. Now I think I understand if I can get your step 1 right it will clear that up. Thanks again! I will def report back tomorrow.

I will need to get to your step 3 eventually but I haven’t gotten that far yet. I do pay it off each month so let’s hope it doesn’t get more complicated for me. Thank you again!!!


Rock on! Think of that negative CC balance as part of a net worth calculation.

You have $1,000 in checking, $0 on CC and a net worth of $1,000.
But you spend $200 on CC. Your $1,000 is still in checking but your net worth is now $800: $1,000 in checking + ($200) on your CC = $800.

You can also think of paying a CC as a transfer because that's how YNAB does it. When you pay that $200 CC bill you're transferring $200 from checking to your CC. $1000-$200 = $800 in checking. ($200)+$200=$0 in CC.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Or better yet, I can explain how credit cards work! Let me know if you have a specific aspect you’d like clarified


Can you make it pull itemized credit card charges, like Mint/Quicken, etc? I couldn’t figure out a way to do that and it was a dealbreaker for me. I don’t know how anybody sits down and enters every $4.50 drink charge line by line.


Entering the charge is the point I think--it's supposed to spark that moment of consciousness. On a mobile app it's not that hard and it does give you a moment to see your budget and then realize that maybe you better not say "the next round's on me" because you've used up your alcohol budget for the month. Through your categories you decide how granular you want to be--so if it's not an issue for you to manage your drink expenses, you can make a broader category of going out.

Mint is great at monitoring what you are doing with little effort (though quite a few errors at least for me because my cc is about 60-70% at correctly categorizing my expenses), but it's not great at producing the consciousness that helps you meet your financial goals more.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Or better yet, I can explain how credit cards work! Let me know if you have a specific aspect you’d like clarified


Yes, don’t go back to Reddit for me thank you for the offer!! I’ll try to respond here or page you when I have an actual specific question. Thank u again!


No, I love talking about You Need a Budget (YNAB)! My wife and I have been using it for five years and I've helped family members get on board with it. I'll do my best to explain the credit card (CC) system in its basics here.

YNAB's system uses both Accounts and Categories. Accounts represent real world accounts where you money sits, Categories in your budget are the "jobs" you've given those real world dollars in YNAB. A CC account is basically just an account with a negative balance and the CC payment category is the category where dollars you've assigned the "pay off your CC" job are located. And YNAB's system is so slick it moves these dollars around seamlessly.

An Example

Let's say you have $1,000 in your checking account. You have a credit card account you've just paid off so it has a $0 balance. And in your budget you've assigned $250 to your grocery category.

You go to Whole Foods and spend $100 on groceries, here's what happens:

1. You enter the transaction in YNAB - Whole Foods is the payee, Groceries is the category, and your CC is the account
2. When you hit enter $100 moves from your Grocery category to your CC category - so now your grocery category has $150 ($250 less $100), your CC category has $100 in it, your CC account now has a ($100) balance (that's negative $100), and your checking account balance is unchanged at $1,000
3. Now you go to your CC's website and pay it off using your checking account. In YNAB you go to your CC account and click 'Record Payment' and the amount that pops up will be equal to what you have in that CC category (but you can manually change this to whatever payment amount you're making). When you hit enter your checking account will go down by $100, your CC account will go from negative $100 to $0, and your CC category will go from $100 to $0.

I don't know if that helps at all but basically spending money on a credit card will make your CC account more and more negative and YNAB will move the money from the category you spent from into the CC payment category. Paying the CC off is just transferring money from your checking account to your CC account.

Everything is right with the world if the total amount assigned to your categories is equal to the amount in your cash accounts (like checking) and your CC payment category has the same amount as your CC account (but opposite, if you have a negative $100 balance you'll have positive $100 in your CC payment category)

This assumes you're paying your CC off each month, things work the same but it's a bit different if you spend more on CC than you have money in the bank.

Anyway, hope this helps! Happy to answer specific questions if you think of any.


NP here but I wonder if this has changed in the past 10 or so years. When we tried to use YNAB about 10+ years ago, we really struggled with (a) using credit cards and (b) having multiple bank accounts. Does YNAB still preach that you should only have one credit card and one bank account?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Or better yet, I can explain how credit cards work! Let me know if you have a specific aspect you’d like clarified


Yes, don’t go back to Reddit for me thank you for the offer!! I’ll try to respond here or page you when I have an actual specific question. Thank u again!


No, I love talking about You Need a Budget (YNAB)! My wife and I have been using it for five years and I've helped family members get on board with it. I'll do my best to explain the credit card (CC) system in its basics here.

YNAB's system uses both Accounts and Categories. Accounts represent real world accounts where you money sits, Categories in your budget are the "jobs" you've given those real world dollars in YNAB. A CC account is basically just an account with a negative balance and the CC payment category is the category where dollars you've assigned the "pay off your CC" job are located. And YNAB's system is so slick it moves these dollars around seamlessly.

An Example

Let's say you have $1,000 in your checking account. You have a credit card account you've just paid off so it has a $0 balance. And in your budget you've assigned $250 to your grocery category.

You go to Whole Foods and spend $100 on groceries, here's what happens:

1. You enter the transaction in YNAB - Whole Foods is the payee, Groceries is the category, and your CC is the account
2. When you hit enter $100 moves from your Grocery category to your CC category - so now your grocery category has $150 ($250 less $100), your CC category has $100 in it, your CC account now has a ($100) balance (that's negative $100), and your checking account balance is unchanged at $1,000
3. Now you go to your CC's website and pay it off using your checking account. In YNAB you go to your CC account and click 'Record Payment' and the amount that pops up will be equal to what you have in that CC category (but you can manually change this to whatever payment amount you're making). When you hit enter your checking account will go down by $100, your CC account will go from negative $100 to $0, and your CC category will go from $100 to $0.

I don't know if that helps at all but basically spending money on a credit card will make your CC account more and more negative and YNAB will move the money from the category you spent from into the CC payment category. Paying the CC off is just transferring money from your checking account to your CC account.

Everything is right with the world if the total amount assigned to your categories is equal to the amount in your cash accounts (like checking) and your CC payment category has the same amount as your CC account (but opposite, if you have a negative $100 balance you'll have positive $100 in your CC payment category)

This assumes you're paying your CC off each month, things work the same but it's a bit different if you spend more on CC than you have money in the bank.

Anyway, hope this helps! Happy to answer specific questions if you think of any.


NP here but I wonder if this has changed in the past 10 or so years. When we tried to use YNAB about 10+ years ago, we really struggled with (a) using credit cards and (b) having multiple bank accounts. Does YNAB still preach that you should only have one credit card and one bank account?


If you tried YNAB a decade ago it was YNAB4. They completely revamped everything (now called New YNAB or nYNAB) around 2016. I don’t have any experience with YNAB4 but you can certainly have as many cards and accounts as you want.

I do know some people like to continue keeping separate accounts for different types of spending. Like an account just for real estate taxes. An account for presents. That sort of thing is a ton of extra hassle for zero benefit with YNAB. You can do everything with one account and then use categories in YNAB to allocate money to different jobs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Or better yet, I can explain how credit cards work! Let me know if you have a specific aspect you’d like clarified


Yes, don’t go back to Reddit for me thank you for the offer!! I’ll try to respond here or page you when I have an actual specific question. Thank u again!


No, I love talking about You Need a Budget (YNAB)! My wife and I have been using it for five years and I've helped family members get on board with it. I'll do my best to explain the credit card (CC) system in its basics here.

YNAB's system uses both Accounts and Categories. Accounts represent real world accounts where you money sits, Categories in your budget are the "jobs" you've given those real world dollars in YNAB. A CC account is basically just an account with a negative balance and the CC payment category is the category where dollars you've assigned the "pay off your CC" job are located. And YNAB's system is so slick it moves these dollars around seamlessly.

An Example

Let's say you have $1,000 in your checking account. You have a credit card account you've just paid off so it has a $0 balance. And in your budget you've assigned $250 to your grocery category.

You go to Whole Foods and spend $100 on groceries, here's what happens:

1. You enter the transaction in YNAB - Whole Foods is the payee, Groceries is the category, and your CC is the account
2. When you hit enter $100 moves from your Grocery category to your CC category - so now your grocery category has $150 ($250 less $100), your CC category has $100 in it, your CC account now has a ($100) balance (that's negative $100), and your checking account balance is unchanged at $1,000
3. Now you go to your CC's website and pay it off using your checking account. In YNAB you go to your CC account and click 'Record Payment' and the amount that pops up will be equal to what you have in that CC category (but you can manually change this to whatever payment amount you're making). When you hit enter your checking account will go down by $100, your CC account will go from negative $100 to $0, and your CC category will go from $100 to $0.

I don't know if that helps at all but basically spending money on a credit card will make your CC account more and more negative and YNAB will move the money from the category you spent from into the CC payment category. Paying the CC off is just transferring money from your checking account to your CC account.

Everything is right with the world if the total amount assigned to your categories is equal to the amount in your cash accounts (like checking) and your CC payment category has the same amount as your CC account (but opposite, if you have a negative $100 balance you'll have positive $100 in your CC payment category)

This assumes you're paying your CC off each month, things work the same but it's a bit different if you spend more on CC than you have money in the bank.

Anyway, hope this helps! Happy to answer specific questions if you think of any.


NP here but I wonder if this has changed in the past 10 or so years. When we tried to use YNAB about 10+ years ago, we really struggled with (a) using credit cards and (b) having multiple bank accounts. Does YNAB still preach that you should only have one credit card and one bank account?


I am the OP - and I have two credit cards. Granted I am new to YNAB but I never saw anything suggesting I shouldn't have 2.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Or better yet, I can explain how credit cards work! Let me know if you have a specific aspect you’d like clarified

Yes, don’t go back to Reddit for me thank you for the offer!! I’ll try to respond here or page you when I have an actual specific question. Thank u again!

No, I love talking about You Need a Budget (YNAB)! My wife and I have been using it for five years and I've helped family members get on board with it. I'll do my best to explain the credit card (CC) system in its basics here.

YNAB's system uses both Accounts and Categories. Accounts represent real world accounts where you money sits, Categories in your budget are the "jobs" you've given those real world dollars in YNAB. A CC account is basically just an account with a negative balance and the CC payment category is the category where dollars you've assigned the "pay off your CC" job are located. And YNAB's system is so slick it moves these dollars around seamlessly.

An Example

Let's say you have $1,000 in your checking account. You have a credit card account you've just paid off so it has a $0 balance. And in your budget you've assigned $250 to your grocery category.

You go to Whole Foods and spend $100 on groceries, here's what happens:

1. You enter the transaction in YNAB - Whole Foods is the payee, Groceries is the category, and your CC is the account
2. When you hit enter $100 moves from your Grocery category to your CC category - so now your grocery category has $150 ($250 less $100), your CC category has $100 in it, your CC account now has a ($100) balance (that's negative $100), and your checking account balance is unchanged at $1,000
3. Now you go to your CC's website and pay it off using your checking account. In YNAB you go to your CC account and click 'Record Payment' and the amount that pops up will be equal to what you have in that CC category (but you can manually change this to whatever payment amount you're making). When you hit enter your checking account will go down by $100, your CC account will go from negative $100 to $0, and your CC category will go from $100 to $0.

I don't know if that helps at all but basically spending money on a credit card will make your CC account more and more negative and YNAB will move the money from the category you spent from into the CC payment category. Paying the CC off is just transferring money from your checking account to your CC account.

Everything is right with the world if the total amount assigned to your categories is equal to the amount in your cash accounts (like checking) and your CC payment category has the same amount as your CC account (but opposite, if you have a negative $100 balance you'll have positive $100 in your CC payment category)

This assumes you're paying your CC off each month, things work the same but it's a bit different if you spend more on CC than you have money in the bank.

Anyway, hope this helps! Happy to answer specific questions if you think of any.

NP here but I wonder if this has changed in the past 10 or so years. When we tried to use YNAB about 10+ years ago, we really struggled with (a) using credit cards and (b) having multiple bank accounts. Does YNAB still preach that you should only have one credit card and one bank account?

If you tried YNAB a decade ago it was YNAB4. They completely revamped everything (now called New YNAB or nYNAB) around 2016. I don’t have any experience with YNAB4 but you can certainly have as many cards and accounts as you want.

I do know some people like to continue keeping separate accounts for different types of spending. Like an account just for real estate taxes. An account for presents. That sort of thing is a ton of extra hassle for zero benefit with YNAB. You can do everything with one account and then use categories in YNAB to allocate money to different jobs.

Current YNAB4 user here (yes you read that correctly) with multiple credit cards and bank accounts. I believe that YNAB handles cc's and bank accounts similarly. The main difference with New YNAB is that it moves away from the envelope system. You don't know where you stand budget-wise on a day-to-day basis like you did with YNAB4. If you want something similar to YNAB4, I think Buckets is your best move. I posted upthread that the key to cc's is in the setup. If you are set up right, making purchases is applied to the card account and paying the bill is done every month with a transfer from the bank account.
Arlingtonian703
Member Offline
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Or better yet, I can explain how credit cards work! Let me know if you have a specific aspect you’d like clarified

Yes, don’t go back to Reddit for me thank you for the offer!! I’ll try to respond here or page you when I have an actual specific question. Thank u again!

No, I love talking about You Need a Budget (YNAB)! My wife and I have been using it for five years and I've helped family members get on board with it. I'll do my best to explain the credit card (CC) system in its basics here.

YNAB's system uses both Accounts and Categories. Accounts represent real world accounts where you money sits, Categories in your budget are the "jobs" you've given those real world dollars in YNAB. A CC account is basically just an account with a negative balance and the CC payment category is the category where dollars you've assigned the "pay off your CC" job are located. And YNAB's system is so slick it moves these dollars around seamlessly.

An Example

Let's say you have $1,000 in your checking account. You have a credit card account you've just paid off so it has a $0 balance. And in your budget you've assigned $250 to your grocery category.

You go to Whole Foods and spend $100 on groceries, here's what happens:

1. You enter the transaction in YNAB - Whole Foods is the payee, Groceries is the category, and your CC is the account
2. When you hit enter $100 moves from your Grocery category to your CC category - so now your grocery category has $150 ($250 less $100), your CC category has $100 in it, your CC account now has a ($100) balance (that's negative $100), and your checking account balance is unchanged at $1,000
3. Now you go to your CC's website and pay it off using your checking account. In YNAB you go to your CC account and click 'Record Payment' and the amount that pops up will be equal to what you have in that CC category (but you can manually change this to whatever payment amount you're making). When you hit enter your checking account will go down by $100, your CC account will go from negative $100 to $0, and your CC category will go from $100 to $0.

I don't know if that helps at all but basically spending money on a credit card will make your CC account more and more negative and YNAB will move the money from the category you spent from into the CC payment category. Paying the CC off is just transferring money from your checking account to your CC account.

Everything is right with the world if the total amount assigned to your categories is equal to the amount in your cash accounts (like checking) and your CC payment category has the same amount as your CC account (but opposite, if you have a negative $100 balance you'll have positive $100 in your CC payment category)

This assumes you're paying your CC off each month, things work the same but it's a bit different if you spend more on CC than you have money in the bank.

Anyway, hope this helps! Happy to answer specific questions if you think of any.

NP here but I wonder if this has changed in the past 10 or so years. When we tried to use YNAB about 10+ years ago, we really struggled with (a) using credit cards and (b) having multiple bank accounts. Does YNAB still preach that you should only have one credit card and one bank account?

If you tried YNAB a decade ago it was YNAB4. They completely revamped everything (now called New YNAB or nYNAB) around 2016. I don’t have any experience with YNAB4 but you can certainly have as many cards and accounts as you want.

I do know some people like to continue keeping separate accounts for different types of spending. Like an account just for real estate taxes. An account for presents. That sort of thing is a ton of extra hassle for zero benefit with YNAB. You can do everything with one account and then use categories in YNAB to allocate money to different jobs.

Current YNAB4 user here (yes you read that correctly) with multiple credit cards and bank accounts. I believe that YNAB handles cc's and bank accounts similarly. The main difference with New YNAB is that it moves away from the envelope system. You don't know where you stand budget-wise on a day-to-day basis like you did with YNAB4. If you want something similar to YNAB4, I think Buckets is your best move. I posted upthread that the key to cc's is in the setup. If you are set up right, making purchases is applied to the card account and paying the bill is done every month with a transfer from the bank account.


I know from the YNAB subreddit that there are plenty of diehard YNAB4 adherents but since I've never touched the software the differences between YNAB4 and nYNAB are very abstract to me. I hear talks about red arrows and stealing from the future but since nYNAB is all I've known for five years I just keep chugging along.

EDIT: and yes, I made an account on DCUM so I can edit posts. FREEDOM!
Anonymous
i love YNAB. been using for 5 years.

credit cards were the WORST to figure out!

and processing refunds is tough too.

i made a category just for the credit card refunds. i put the refunds here. then, i will use the refund to cover any additional spends. i coudnt figure out a better way, so i choose to apply the refund to another category, rather than putting the money back into the original category.
Arlingtonian703
Member Offline
Anonymous wrote:and processing refunds is tough too.

i made a category just for the credit card refunds. i put the refunds here. then, i will use the refund to cover any additional spends. i coudnt figure out a better way, so i choose to apply the refund to another category, rather than putting the money back into the original category.


I'm confused, why wouldn't you put the refund back in the category?

I spend $100 on shirts and then decide to return $60 of them. I put that $60 refund back into the "shirts" category and my net shows I spent $40 on shirts, which is what I'd like it to do.

I don't mean this in a snarky way but sometimes I think most of people's problems with YNAB come from overthinking things.
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