Retentions
In industries like construction, retentions are final amounts of payments held back by a customer or contractor to ensue the satisfactory completion of a project. The retention is generally a percentage of the gross value of work done over a period. Once a contract has been completed in the period mandated by the contract, the subcontractor can submit an invoice to recoup the amount of the retention.
A retention can be — for example, 10% of the contract amount of a job. You can break this down further — for example, pay out 5% of the retention amount after two months, and pay out the remaining 5% two months after that.
You can use Job Costing to:
- Create, edit, and track retentions.
- Invoice retentions following the completion of work.
How Greentree Desktop Calculates Retentions
Greentree calculates and tracks retentions as part of the job invoicing process by tracking the amount a contractor invoices and applying a percentage to each retention break using this formula:
Gross value of invoice x Retention percentage
For example, ...
Retention Workflow
To set up retentions, you must:
- Enable retentions for a company on the Job Cost Module Control form.
- Specify whether retentions should be deducted for job cost sales codes.
- Set up job templates to use retentions (if you plan to use templates to create jobs).
- Create a job that uses, and tracks, retentions. This involves:
- Setting due dates
- Setting up retention breaks
- Calculate the retention. Greentree Desktop
does this automatically when you create a job cost AR invoice for
the job.
As you add new lines to the invoice, the values on the Retentions tab update. Then, create a pro-forma invoice (which doesn't generate a transaction).
- Claim the retention.
On the Retentions tab of the Job Maintenance form, click the Claim Retentions button.
- Retentions Tab - Job Maintenance
- Retentions Tab - Template Maintenance
- Defaults Tab - Job Costing Module Control
- JC AR Invoice Entry