Map to your chart of accounts
Map transactions from the Stripe default accounts to the chart of accounts in your general ledger.
You can customise Stripe Revenue Recognition reporting to use your General Ledger (GL) chart of accounts instead of using the default Stripe accounts. You can configure a rule to map transactions by product, shipping region, or invoice metadata to your GL account. Stripe applies your custom mappings to the CSV reports you download and also when you audit your revenue numbers. A mapping rule consists of the following:
Mapping rule attribute | Description |
---|---|
Stripe account | The Stripe default account that you want to override. |
GL account | The name of the GL account you want to override the Stripe account with. |
GL account number | The number corresponding to the GL account. |
Effective period | The time period the mapping applies to. An invoice line item fulfils the effective period requirement if the finalisation time of the invoice is within the specified effective period. A charge fulfils the effective period requirement if the balance transaction it corresponds to has a creation time that’s within the specified effective period. |
Condition | An optional criteria to map transactions by product, shipping region, or invoice metadata. If not specified, all transactions involving the configured Stripe account are mapped to the GL account. |
Status | Active: The mapping rule is active and all transactions are mapped as per the rule. Processing: The rule is processing. On completion, the rule is active and transactions are mapped accordingly. |
Configuring a mapping rule
Mapping rule configuration is a 4-step process – click the add mapping button on the accounts mapping page to begin.
- Select Stripe account: Select the default Stripe account from the dropdown for which you want to create the rule.
- Select GL account: You can select your GL account from the dropdown or add one if you can’t find it in the dropdown. When setting up the rules for the first time, you have to add these accounts by specifying the GL account name and number. You have to specify at least a name or a number to add the account.
- Specify effective period: The effective period is the time frame in which the mapping rule is applicable. Select a start and end date from the dropdown to configure the effective period. If you specify an effective period that overlaps with closed accounting periods, you’ll see corrections in your report in the current open accounting period. You can reopen the past accounting periods corresponding to the effective period to avoid corrections.
- Specify mapping condition (optional)*: You can optionally specify a mapping condition on any of the following attributes:
- Product: If you have product specific accounts in your GL, you can classify your transactions based on the products that you have configured in the Stripe Dashboard.
- Shipping region: Similar to products, you can specify the shipping region to map transactions to the relevant GL account. Only ISO-compliant country and state codes are supported.
- Invoice metadata: You can configure a custom rule using invoice metadata if your GL accounts don’t track transactions by product or shipping region. Create a rule by selecting a key and adding a value. The keys are from metadata you created in past invoices.**
Click Map accounts to create the mapping rule and for Stripe to process the data. The rule’s status changes to active when the data processing is complete, and you can then download reports with the mapped GL accounts.
Mapping rule configuration example
The following example involves 3 different products:
- Product A: Annual subscription cost of 1,200 USD
- Product B: Annual subscription cost of 2,400 USD
- Product C: Annual subscription cost of 3,600 USD
If you sell 1 subscription each for A, B, and C in January, your journal entry at the end of the month appears as follows without account mapping:
Account | January |
---|---|
Revenue | +600 USD |
Deferred Revenue | +6600 USD |
However, the user has 3 separate revenue accounts in its GL, say revenue_A, revenue_B, and revenue_C for tracking revenue corresponding to these 3 products. The user has to do manual work to identify revenue in these accounts before posting to its GL.
If you have product-specific accounts in your General Ledger that you want to map to, you can create 3 mapping rules:
Stripe account | GL account number | GL account | Condition | Effective period |
---|---|---|---|---|
Revenue | 10001 | revenue_A | Product A | Jan 2023 - Indefinite |
Revenue | 10002 | revenue_B | Product B | Jan 2023 - Indefinite |
Revenue | 10003 | revenue_C | Product C | Jan 2023 - Indefinite |
After you set up these rules, your journal entries will contain three line items reflecting the revenue distribution for each product. This can help you streamline the process of posting to your GL.
GL account number | Account | January |
---|---|---|
1001 | revenue_A | +100 USD |
1002 | revenue_B | +200 USD |
1003 | revenue_C | +300 USD |
Deferred Revenue | +6600 USD |