Entity-type specific equity guide for QBO bookkeepers: sole prop, partnership, S-corp, C-corp. Owner draws vs distributions vs dividends, retained earnings, year-end closing entries.
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Most chart of accounts articles treat equity as one concept (owner's equity, contributions, draws, retained earnings) and apply the same structure regardless of entity. That's wrong. A sole prop's equity section looks nothing like a C-corp's, and treating an S-corp distribution like a sole prop draw will get the books in trouble fast.
This guide is entity-specific. We cover the equity setup for sole proprietorships and single-member LLCs, partnerships and multi-member LLCs, S-corporations, and C-corporations. We name the actual accounts that appear in QBO for each entity type, the year-end closing entries the bookkeeper posts, and the IRS scrutiny points (S-corp reasonable comp, C-corp accumulated earnings tax) that drive the categorization.
Equity by Entity Type
The first question on any new client engagement: what's the entity? It changes how you set up everything from payroll to equity. A quick visual of the equity sections side-by-side:
Entity | Primary Equity Accounts
Sole prop / SMLLC | Owner's Equity, Owner's Contributions, Owner's Draws
Partnership / Multi-member LLC | Partner Capital (per partner), Partner Contributions, Partner Draws
S-corp | Common Stock, APIC, Retained Earnings, Distributions
C-corp | Common Stock, APIC, Retained Earnings, Dividends, Treasury Stock
The reason structure varies: tax treatment differs, IRS reporting differs, and the legal documents creating the equity differ. A sole prop has no shareholders; there's just the owner. A partnership has partners with capital accounts tracked individually for tax purposes. An S-corp has shareholders with stock and a different distribution mechanism. A C-corp has shareholders, dividends taxed at the shareholder level, and potential accumulated earnings concerns.
Why entity type drives the equity account structure
Equity accounts aren't decorative. They map to the tax return. A sole prop's Schedule C ties to the business's Owner's Equity calculation. A partnership's K-1 capital account ties to each partner's Capital account. An S-corp's K-1 includes basis tracking that may be partially driven by Distribution accounts. A C-corp's dividend reporting on 1099-DIV ties to the Dividends Paid account.
If the QBO equity setup doesn't match the entity type, the year-end tax preparation becomes a cleanup project. Get the structure right at engagement start.
Sole Prop / SMLLC Equity Accounts
Sole proprietorships and single-member LLCs (taxed as disregarded entities) use the simplest equity structure. There's one owner, so there's one set of equity accounts.
Owner's Equity (cumulative)
"Owner's Equity" is the cumulative net investment in the business: historical contributions plus historical net income, minus historical draws. The balance grows as the business retains earnings and shrinks as the owner takes draws.
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Trial Balance: What It Is, How to Read It, and What to Do When It's Off
The trial balance lists every GL account with its debit or credit balance, proving total debits equal total credits. Here's how to read it, and the troubleshooting framework for when it doesn't balance.
Income Statement (P&L): How to Read & Use Your Profit and Loss
The income statement (P&L) reports revenue, expenses, and net income for a period. Here's how to read each section, what it reveals about the business, and how to set up class- and location-based custom P&L views in QBO.
General Ledger (GL): The Backbone of Your Accounting System
The general ledger is the master record of every transaction posted to every account. It feeds the trial balance, which feeds the financial statements. Here's how the GL actually works in QBO and why bookkeepers care about it.
QBO setup: create "Owner's Equity" as the parent equity account. Most QBO templates ship with this for sole prop setups; if not, add it manually.
Owner's Contributions (current year)
When the owner puts money into the business (a personal cash deposit, a personal credit card paying for business expenses), the entry is debit cash (or expense), credit "Owner's Contributions." This is a sub-account of Owner's Equity that resets to zero at year-end.
The reason for a separate sub-account: visibility. Without it, contributions and draws blend into Owner's Equity and you lose the ability to report on capital activity for the year. Mid-year, the CEO or tax preparer wants to see "how much did the owner put in this year?" Easy if there's a current-year contributions account.
Owner's Draws (current year)
Draws are owner withdrawals: cash transferred from the business to the owner's personal account, personal expenses paid from the business card. Goes to "Owner's Draws", a sub-account of Owner's Equity with a debit balance (it reduces equity).
Critical rule: draws are NOT an expense. A sole prop owner's compensation isn't a deductible business expense. The owner pays themselves by taking distributions of profit. Posting draws to "Wages" or "Officer Compensation" is wrong and overstates expenses.
The S-corp equivalent (where owner-employees DO take wages) is different; see the S-corp section below. For sole props and SMLLCs, all owner cash flows are equity transactions.
Net income to equity at year-end
At year-end, net income (or loss) for the year flows from the income statement into Owner's Equity. The closing entry typically rolls:
Net Income (current year on the books) → Owner's Equity
Owner's Draws (current year) → Owner's Equity (negative)
After closing, Owner's Contributions and Owner's Draws reset to zero, and Owner's Equity reflects the cumulative position. QBO doesn't auto-close; most bookkeepers post the closing entry manually as part of year-end close. See the QBO closing section below.
Partnership / Multi-Member LLC Equity Accounts
Partnerships and multi-member LLCs (typically taxed as partnerships) need separate capital accounts for each partner. The structure mirrors sole prop but multiplied by the number of partners.
For each partner:
Partner Capital - [Name] (cumulative)
Partner Contributions - [Name] (current year)
Partner Draws - [Name] (current year)
Year-end allocations of net income/loss flow per the partnership agreement, typically by ownership percentage but sometimes by special allocations (preferred returns, profits interests). The bookkeeper's role: maintain the per-partner capital tracking; the tax preparer handles the K-1 capital reconciliation including Section 704(b) book capital, tax basis capital, and the IRS-required tax basis reporting.
For most small-business partnerships, QBO's capital accounts are kept on book basis (cumulative contributions plus allocated income minus draws). The K-1 tax basis is reconciled separately by the tax preparer.
S-Corp Equity Accounts
S-corp equity is structured like a small corporation: stock plus retained earnings plus distributions. But the tax treatment of owner pay is unique. Owners can be employees AND shareholders, and the line between reasonable comp (W-2 wages) and distributions (equity) is the IRS audit hot spot.
Common Stock
The base equity account: par value of issued stock. For most small S-corps, this is a token amount ($1,000 or less). When the S-corp is formed, the founders' initial capital contributions create the Common Stock balance.
QBO setup: "Common Stock" as a top-level equity account.
Additional Paid-In Capital (APIC)
When shareholders contribute capital above par value (which is almost always, since par is typically $1 or $0.01 per share), the excess goes to APIC. Subsequent capital contributions also flow through APIC.
QBO setup: "Additional Paid-In Capital" as a top-level equity account, separate from Common Stock.
Retained Earnings
Retained Earnings is the cumulative net income (or loss) since the S-corp's inception, minus cumulative distributions. QBO ships with a "Retained Earnings" account by default; the year-end closing process rolls current-year net income into Retained Earnings.
For S-corps, Retained Earnings on the books often differs from the AAA (Accumulated Adjustments Account) tracked for tax purposes. AAA is the S-corp's tax-basis equity calculation that determines whether distributions are taxable returns of basis or taxable distributions of pre-S-corp earnings (rare). The AAA reconciliation is the tax preparer's job; the bookkeeper maintains the book Retained Earnings.
Distributions (not draws)
S-corp owners take distributions, not draws. The terminology matters: distributions on Form 1120-S K-1 line 16D, draws on Schedule C. Different forms, different treatment.
QBO setup: "Distributions" or "Shareholder Distributions" as an equity account with a debit balance. When the S-corp owner withdraws cash, the entry is debit "Distributions," credit cash. At year-end, distributions roll into Retained Earnings (or are tracked separately depending on how the books are structured).
Reasonable comp via W-2 (separate from distributions)
This is the S-corp specific complexity: owner-employees must take reasonable compensation as W-2 wages BEFORE taking distributions. The IRS scrutinizes S-corps with low or zero W-2 wages and high distributions because owners are using distributions to avoid Social Security and Medicare tax (which only applies to W-2 wages, not S-corp distributions).
QBO mapping:
W-2 wages to owner: post via payroll integration to "Officer Compensation" or "Wages Expense" (income statement, deductible expense)
Distributions: post to "Distributions" (equity, NOT expense)
The bookkeeper doesn't decide what's reasonable; that's the tax preparer's call based on industry, services performed, and IRS guidance. But the bookkeeper has to keep the W-2 wages and the distributions in separate accounts so the analysis is possible.
For Gusto/ADP setups: configure the S-corp owner with proper W-2 setup including the S-corp 2% shareholder health insurance treatment if applicable. Without it, the owner's health insurance won't flow through W-2 Box 14 correctly and the deduction is lost.
S-corp basis tracking (often outside QBO)
Each shareholder has tax basis in their S-corp stock and (potentially) debt. Basis goes up with capital contributions and net income allocations, down with distributions and net losses. Distributions in excess of basis become taxable.
Most S-corp basis tracking happens outside QBO, in a spreadsheet or in the tax preparer's software. The bookkeeper's QBO setup just needs to capture the inputs (contributions, distributions, allocated income) accurately so the tax preparer can build the basis schedule.
C-Corp Equity Accounts
C-corps have the most complex equity structure because they're taxed at two levels (corporate income tax plus shareholder dividend tax) and have additional considerations (treasury stock, accumulated earnings).
Common Stock and APIC
Same as S-corp: Common Stock at par value, APIC for everything above par. C-corps may also have preferred stock if there are multiple classes, with corresponding preferred APIC.
Retained Earnings
Cumulative net income minus dividends paid. The C-corp 21% federal corporate tax rate (under TCJA, retained under OBBBA) applies before any dividends.
Dividends
Dividends paid to shareholders go to "Dividends" or "Dividends Paid", an equity account with a debit balance. At year-end, dividends roll into Retained Earnings (reducing the balance).
Dividends are reported to shareholders on Form 1099-DIV. The C-corp doesn't get a deduction for dividends paid (that's the second level of taxation; dividends are paid from after-tax earnings).
Terminology note: "dividends" is C-corp specific. S-corps use "distributions." Don't mix the terms; the IRS reporting forms differ.
Treasury Stock
Treasury stock is stock the corporation has bought back from shareholders. Goes to "Treasury Stock" as a contra-equity account (debit balance reducing total equity).
For most small-business C-corps, treasury stock isn't relevant; there are no buybacks. For larger or more sophisticated structures (private equity-backed C-corps, founders bought out), treasury stock matters.
Why C-corp retained earnings can trigger AET concerns
The Accumulated Earnings Tax (AET) under IRC §531 applies to C-corps that retain earnings beyond reasonable business needs to avoid shareholder-level dividend tax. The threshold for the safe harbor accumulation is $250,000 ($150,000 for personal service corporations).
If a C-corp consistently retains earnings well beyond operating needs without documented business reasons, the IRS can impose a 20% AET on the excess. The bookkeeper's role: flag growing Retained Earnings balances to the tax preparer for AET analysis.
This is rare for small businesses but worth knowing. Most small-business C-corps either pay regular dividends, reinvest in operating assets, or convert to S-corp status to avoid the issue.
QBO Equity Account Setup
Default equity accounts by entity type in QBO
QBO's onboarding asks for the entity type and configures default accounts accordingly:
Sole prop / SMLLC: "Owner's Equity" + "Owner's Investment" + "Owner's Pay & Personal Expenses"
Partnership: "Partner Capital" template (one per partner, manually added)
The defaults are a starting point. For sole props, rename "Owner's Investment" to "Owner's Contributions" if you prefer, and "Owner's Pay & Personal Expenses" to "Owner's Draws." For S-corps, add "Distributions" and (if used) "APIC." For partnerships, set up per-partner capital accounts.
Adding/renaming equity accounts at conversion
When a business converts entity type (sole prop to S-corp election, S-corp to C-corp election), the equity structure has to change in QBO. The conversion isn't automatic.
Sole prop to S-corp conversion (most common):
As of the effective date of the S-corp election, close the sole prop equity accounts (Owner's Equity, Contributions, Draws)
Set up S-corp equity structure: Common Stock, APIC, Retained Earnings, Distributions
Migrate the closing Owner's Equity balance to a combination of Common Stock + APIC + Retained Earnings, depending on the corporate structure adopted
This is a tax preparer-supported workflow; the bookkeeper executes the QBO entries based on the tax preparer's allocation. Don't attempt the conversion unilaterally.
Year-end closing entries
QBO doesn't auto-close; most bookkeepers do it manually. The year-end closing process:
For sole props:
Net Income (current year) → Owner's Equity
Owner's Contributions → Owner's Equity (zero out)
Owner's Draws → Owner's Equity (zero out)
For S-corps:
Net Income (current year) → Retained Earnings
Distributions → Retained Earnings (or kept separate per preparer preference)
For C-corps:
Net Income (current year) → Retained Earnings
Dividends → Retained Earnings (zero out the current year dividends account)
QBO has a "Close Books" feature that locks the prior-year transactions but doesn't actually post the closing journal entries. The closing entries are a separate manual workflow. Most bookkeepers post them as the last entries of the year and lock the period.
How to map Gusto S-corp owner runs to W-2 wages
For S-corp owner-employees on Gusto: configure the owner as an employee with proper W-2 setup, including S-corp 2% shareholder health insurance treatment if applicable. Gusto handles the W-2 Box 1 inclusion of health insurance and Box 14 reporting automatically when configured correctly.
The QBO journal entry from Gusto for an owner payroll run will hit:
Officer Compensation (or Wages Expense): debit
Various Payroll Liability accounts: credit
Bank account: credit (net pay)
Owner distributions are posted separately as cash transfers, debit "Distributions," credit cash. Don't post distributions through the payroll system; they're not wages and they shouldn't run through Gusto.