QuickBooks Online For Dummies, 2026 Edition (eBook)
530 Seiten
For Dummies (Verlag)
978-1-394-36718-4 (ISBN)
Step-by-step guidance on the latest version of the popular cloud accounting app
QuickBooks Online For Dummies, 2026 Edition helps you save time and money. This beginner-friendly guide walks you through the basic setup of the online accounting software. Plus, this resource provides detailed guidance on key features, so you know how to navigate your financial data with ease. With QuickBooks Online For Dummies, 2026 Edition, you'll discover how to use any device to: view and update records, create invoices, record sales, pay bills, manage inventory, print checks, process payroll, prepare tax returns, balance accounts, generate financial reports, and beyond. Best of all? Everything's backed up in the cloud, so you'll get the peace of mind that comes with secure data. Use this Dummies guide to get up and running with QuickBooks Online.
Inside:
- Make the switch to QuickBooks Online, or set up your business finances from scratch
- Get easy-to-follow instructions for accessing your data remotely and saving time with automated features
- Understand the new interface and the latest features, including Project Center and AI integration
- Stay on top of your budget, your taxes, and your reporting requirements
QuickBooks Online is easy to use for any type of business, and QuickBooks Online For Dummies makes it even easier.
David H. Ringstrom, CPA, is the president of Accounting Advisors, Inc., a spreadsheet and database consulting firm. He's an expert in Microsoft Excel and QuickBooks, and is the author of Microsoft 365 Excel All-In-One For Dummies and previous editions of QuickBooks Online For Dummies.
Introduction
Welcome aboard! Whether you’re brand new to QuickBooks or have a few accounting scars to show for past attempts, this book is here to help you tame QuickBooks Online and get things done — without pulling your hair out. I’ll guide you through the features, pitfalls, shortcuts, and smart strategies so you can spend less time wrestling with your books and more time running your business.
QuickBooks Online is cloud-based, meaning your accounting files live in the great digital beyond, accessible from just about anywhere with an internet connection. This book focuses solely on QuickBooks Online. If you’re looking for help with QuickBooks Desktop, you’ve wandered into the wrong neighborhood. For that, check out Stephen L. Nelson’s QuickBooks All-in-One For Dummies 2026 (John Wiley & Sons, Inc.), where the Desktop edition gets its due.
QuickBooks Online means well. It’s built to take the sting out of accounting, and on a good day, it actually does. But like most software, it has its quirks and occasionally may cause you to gnash your teeth. I’ve done my best to point out common pitfalls and explain things clearly, but if you have a question that this book doesn’t answer, feel free to reach out. You can email me at ask@davidringstrom.com, and I’ll do my best to help you get unstuck.
Some of the tasks in QuickBooks are delightfully simple. For instance, you can kick-start your recordkeeping by forwarding purchase receipts to a special address tied to your company — no paper cuts required. You can also lean on generative AI (artificial intelligence) to turn that chaotic jumble of notes about a project you just wrapped up into a polished invoice — because yes, even QuickBooks is getting in on the robot magic.
Other tasks, like setting up bank feeds to download transactions from your bank accounts and credit cards, become easier once you’ve done a little groundwork. And then there are the more intimidating chores, like entering journal entries, which might look like accounting wizardry if you’re not a numbers nerd. Don’t worry. I walk you through just about everything you may want to do in your accounting records and even a few power moves you can pull off in Microsoft Excel when QuickBooks doesn’t quite cut it.
About This Book
In the past, QuickBooks Online changed at a gentle, predictable pace. New features appeared gradually, and the interface stayed largely consistent. But now? These are uncharted waters. While writing this book, I watched features vanish and then mysteriously return — sometimes all in the same week — without so much as a heads-up. My editors and I have done our best to document a moving target. If something doesn’t look quite like it does in this book, it’s not you. It’s QuickBooks. For example, one day the sidebar sported a button called My Apps; the next, the same command was relabeled All Apps.
Before you dive into the inner workings of your accounting software, let me get a few technical conventions out of the way:
- Text that you’re meant to type as it appears in the book is bold. The exception is when you’re working through a list of steps. Because each step is bold, the text to type is not bold. Tricky, eh?
- Web addresses and programming code appear in
monofont. If you’re reading a digital version of this book on a device connected to the internet, note that you can tap or click a web address to visit that website, like this:https://www.dummies.com. - Search keywords are italic. For example: Enter the keywords IE allow scripted windows in your favorite search engine.
-
Everyone can use QuickBooks Online in either a web browser or the mobile app:
On a desktop, Intuit recommends one of the following browsers:
- Google Chrome version 78 or higher
- Mozilla Firefox version 76 or higher (macOS users also need the Firefox PDF plugin)
- Microsoft Edge version 75 or higher
- Safari version 12 or higher (macOS only)
Advanced and Accountant subscribers also have access to a downloadable desktop app, which offers features that aren’t unavailable within the web browser version.
On a mobile device, you’ll need to be running iOS 11.1 or higher with the Safari browser or Android Nougat 7.1.1 or higher with the Chrome browser.
Most modern computers should easily exceed the minimum requirements for QuickBooks Online, but you can get the nitty-gritty computer specification details here:
https://intuit.me/3yEaSJL. - When I discuss a command to choose, I separate the elements of the sequence with a command arrow that looks like this: ⇒. For example, when you see Sales ⇒ Invoices, you should click Sales in the left bar and then click Invoices in the dropdown menu that appears.
Foolish Assumptions
I had to assume some things about you to write this book, so here are the educated guesses I made:
- You know that you need to manage a set of accounting records for one or more businesses, and you might even have some sort of setup in place already. I did not assume that you know how to do all those things on a computer.
- You may want to analyze some of your accounting data outside QuickBooks, which is why I include chapters on using Microsoft Excel. Some of that information translates to Google Sheets as well.
- You have a personal computer running Windows 11 (like me) or a Mac running macOS 10.11 or later.
- You have a copy of Microsoft Excel on your computer, or you plan to use the free Google Sheets at
https://sheets.google.com— because sometimes QuickBooks needs a little spreadsheet sidekick.
Icons Used in This Book
Throughout the book, I use icons to draw your attention to various concepts that I want to make sure you don’t skip in the main part of the text. Sometimes I share information to help you save time; in other cases, the goal is to keep your accounting records safe.
This icon highlights time-saving tricks and quirky shortcuts you might stumble across in QuickBooks. Who doesn’t love getting more done with less effort?
This icon flags the trickier bits of QuickBooks — things that might trip you up if you’re not paying attention. Keep it in mind before QuickBooks throws you a curveball.
This product can burn your eyes. Oops! Wrong type of warning! Your eyeballs are safe with me. That said, do pay close attention to warnings you come across. They’re here to help you steer clear of problems that could wreak havoc in your accounting records, or, more commonly, just drive you up the wall.
At times, I may wander into some geeky territory — esoteric stuff about QuickBooks, your web browser, or your computer. If that’s not your cup of tea (or double-shot espresso), feel free to skip those parts without guilt. Trust me, I won’t judge.
Beyond the Book
In addition to the book content, this product comes with a free, access-anywhere Cheat Sheet that lists keyboard shortcuts and toolbar buttons. The Cheat Sheet also covers how to convert a company from QuickBooks Desktop or Sage 50 to QuickBooks Online, and enter payroll history. To get this Cheat Sheet, go to https://www.dummies.com and search for QuickBooks Online For Dummies Cheat Sheet.
My technical editor extraordinaire, Dan DeLong, has two ways to help you learn more about QuickBooks:
- QuickBooks Chooser Chatbot: This interactive tool will ask you questions to help you determine the right subscription level for your business.
- School of Bookkeeping: Dan and his team offer up-to-date information and tutorials at
https://schoolofbookkeeping.com/that break down every version of QuickBooks Online, QuickBooks services (Payments and Payroll), and other tasks into bite-sized lessons that you can watch and help you get back to business. Use promo code QBO4DUMMIES to save 20 percent on any membership.
If you’re looking for video-based Excel training, please visit my site at www.professionalsexcel.com. The same QBO4DUMMIES promo code enables you to save 20 percent on any individual videos or subscriptions here as well.
Where to Go from Here
You’ll find a breakdown of the QuickBooks Online subscription tiers, along with what each one includes and what it might cost you, in Chapter 1. Once you’ve picked a plan (or are still weighing your options), the rest of the book helps you get the most out of that choice. I’ve organized the chapters to align with the subscription ladder, so you don’t have to wade through features you’ll never use. Here’s how to chart your course through the chapters ahead.
- Part 1, “Core Functionality”: Covers the features available to all QuickBooks Online users, regardless of subscription level.
- Part 2, “QuickBooks Online Essentials Features”: Covers additional features that upgrading to an Essentials subscription adds, such as multicurrency functionality, product bundles, time tracking, applying...
| Erscheint lt. Verlag | 13.10.2025 |
|---|---|
| Sprache | englisch |
| Themenwelt | Mathematik / Informatik ► Informatik |
| Schlagworte | accounting software • bookkeeping for small business • cloud accounting software • Cloud Based Accounting • QuickBooks • quickbooks learning • QuickBooks Online • quickbooks reference • quickbooks reports • quickbooks training • quickbooks tutorial |
| ISBN-10 | 1-394-36718-X / 139436718X |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1-394-36718-4 / 9781394367184 |
| Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR) | |
| Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt? |
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