Editing an Expense
How to correct an existing expense without losing the reporting links that make it useful later.
Open the expense first, then choose Edit. Most expense edits are about category clean-up, reference corrections, or linking the cost to the right job or customer after the fact.
Edits That Change Reporting
- Expense Category: This is usually the most important correction because it changes where the cost sits in expense reporting.
- Amount and VAT fields: Check these together so the gross, VAT, and net values still agree after the edit.
- Payment Reference: Good for fixing traceability without changing the amount.
- Customer, Job, and Service links: Update these when the cost belongs somewhere more specific than it was first entered.
Changing Transaction Type
If you change the transaction type away from Expense, the ledger line stops belonging on the Expenses screen and will live under Transactions instead. That is sometimes correct, but it should be a deliberate choice rather than an accidental one.
When Editing Is Blocked
If the expense is tied to a transferred customer or transferred job, Work Planner blocks editing. That protects the financial history once the linked operational record has moved business context.
Recurring Expenses
If the expense is one occurrence from a recurring schedule, the schedule section stays read-only here. Use the linked scheduled transaction when you need to change the future pattern, not just this one occurrence.
Related articles
- Creating an Expense: Useful if you want to compare the current expense against the original create flow.
- Expense Detail View: Shows what is worth checking before you edit.
- Transactions List: Helpful when the edit means the record should really live in the wider ledger view instead.