How do I pay owner’s draws or equity withdrawals in QuickBooks Online? Should they be recorded as expenses?

Owner’s Draws in QuickBooks Online (USA)

Owner’s draws should not be recorded as expenses in QuickBooks Online. They are equity transactions money the owner takes out of the business—not business costs. Always record them in the equity section, not on the Profit & Loss statement.

The Most Important Rule

Owner’s draws are not business expenses. They do not affect net income, profit, or taxes. Categorizing an owner’s draw as an expense will incorrectly reduce your business profit and distort financial statements.

Correct Accounting Treatment by Business Type

  • Sole Proprietor or Single-Member LLC: Equity → Owner’s Draw
  • Partnership: Equity → Partner Draw – [Partner Name]
  • S-Corp: Equity → Shareholder Distribution (do not record as payroll unless it actually went through payroll)
  • C-Corp: Equity → Shareholder Distribution or Dividends (not an expense)

How to Record an Owner’s Draw in QuickBooks Online

There are two main steps:

  1. Create an equity account (if not already available)
  2. Record the withdrawal as an equity distribution

Step 1 Set Up the Equity Account

Go to Settings → Chart of Accounts → New. Use the following settings:

  • Account Type: Equity
  • Detail Type: Owner’s Draw / Owner’s Equity / Partner Draw / Shareholder Distribution
  • Name: Owner’s Draw (or Partner Draw – John, Shareholder Distribution, etc.)

Step 2 Record the Owner Withdrawal

If money was taken from a bank account, go to + New → Expense or + New → Check (depending on how the withdrawal was made). Enter:

  • Payee: Owner name (optional)
  • Payment Account: Bank account used
  • Category: Owner’s Draw (equity account from Step 1)
  • Amount: Withdrawal amount

This will reduce cash and owner’s equity but will not show as an expense on the Profit & Loss statement.

Step 3 Bank Transfers to Owner

If the owner is transferred money from the business account, use + New → Transfer:

  • Transfer From: Business bank account
  • Transfer To: Owner’s Draw (equity account)

Step 4 Personal Use of Business Funds

If the owner uses business funds for personal expenses (e.g., buying groceries on a company card), categorize the transaction as Owner’s Draw, not as a business expense.

Common Errors to Avoid

  • Mistake #1: Coding owner withdrawals as payroll. Only W-2 employees (in S-Corps) get payroll. Owners of sole proprietorships or LLCs do not take payroll.
  • Mistake #2: Recording draws as expenses. This incorrectly reduces profit and can cause tax overstatements.
  • Mistake #3: Deleting the transaction. This breaks bank reconciliation.
  • Mistake #4: Using “Ask My Accountant” long term. This leaves your books incomplete.

Summary Table

Action Category Hits Profit & Loss?
Owner takes cash Owner’s Draw (Equity) No
Owner uses company money personally Owner’s Draw No
Owner contributes money Owner’s Contribution (Equity) No
Owner repays the business Owner Contribution No
Employee reimbursement Expense + Liability Yes (only business portion)

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