I use the reconcile feature in at least two other ways:

1. I keep current accounts with a lot of other parties -- four adult children, 
parents, in-laws, my sister's farm operation, our condo association, and at 
least a half-dozen more. Most of them don't do formal accounting and rely on me 
to know how much they owe me (or occasionally I owe them). Things go in and out 
in various ways, but either way they repay me (using Canadian Interac 
transfers, an email thing) item for item, or I print them a list of open 
transactions and ask them to pay me the balance. In either case the account 
should total zero, but because of timing it often doesn't actually come to zero 
(for example, when more debits are entered before their payment arrives).

In this case, some entries must be reconciled to zero, and it's often not 
trivial to see which. So I start Gnucash's reconcile and enter a balance of 
zero. Then I can simply tick off debits and credits that add to zero and I'm 
done. Much easier and more verifiable than manually changing reconcile status 
line by line.

2. For those of the above parties that do have their own formal accounting -- 
done, invariably, by me -- I have to reconcile my version of what they owe me 
with their version of what I owe them. For example, they might have sent 12 
organic chickens over the last few months and I might have bought them a new 
microwave, phone battery, and furnace filters (they're not very technical -- I 
order these things for them with delivery there). For these current accounts I 
reconcile one against the other, starting from a situation where neither is 
complete. Easier to do than explain, but the idea is that you have two Gnucashs 
open side by side (one in a VM) and tick off matching entries, leaving entries 
only in one set of books. You enter those in the opposite books and repeat 
until everything is reconciled. Not the original intension of the system, but 
it's far faster than other ways I've tried (and I've been using variations of 
this for 25+ years).

Paul  

-----Original Message-----
From: gnucash-user <[email protected]> On Behalf 
Of David Cousens
Sent: December 19, 2022 9:27 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [GNC] What accounts should I reconcile?

Dave

Reconiliation requires an independent statement of the account (e.g. from the 
bank's perspective) against which to reconcile the account. You generally don't 
have that with an expense account. I have had to investigate discrepancies 
between  what I thought I owed a vendor and what they claimed I owed them which 
involved them supplying a statement of account detailing all purchases from and 
all payments I had made from them for a specific period against which I coud 
perform a partial reconciliation This wa s before the business customer /vendor 
reports existed

David Cousens
On Tue, 2022-12-20 at 01:21 +0000, Dr. David Kirkby wrote:
> For simplicity assume that I havé the following two accounts, all in GBP.
> 
> Assets -> Bank
> Assets > PayPal
> 
> I can reconcile those, and I find the process useful.
> 
> However, I noticed that it is possible to reconcile most, if not all 
> other accounts. Is there any point in reconciling the other accounts, 
> such as
> 
> Expenses > Office supplies?
> 
> 
> Dave

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