How to Book Health Insurance in QuickBooks (With Journal Entries) 

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Payroll Accounting

How to Book Health Insurance in QuickBooks
(With Journal Entries)

Offering health insurance is one of the best things you can do for your team. Recording it correctly in QuickBooks is what keeps your books clean, your taxes right, and year-end stress-free.

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Separate costs per pay period: employee portion + employer contribution
$38.25
FICA savings per employee with a $500 pre-tax Section 125 deduction
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Journal entries needed for accrual basis — one step more than cash basis

A lot of business owners freeze up the first time they try to record health insurance in QuickBooks. Who pays what? Where does it land on the books? Does the employee deduction need its own expense line? What if you’re on accrual basis?

These are fair questions — and the answers matter. Getting it wrong means messy financials, incorrect tax filings, and painful surprises at year-end. Getting it right means your books reflect the true cost of employment from day one.

Here’s the structure: every pay period, there are two distinct costs. The first is the employee’s share — the portion withheld from their paycheck. The second is the employer’s share — the company’s additional contribution on top of wages. Each has its own account, its own liability, and its own logic in the general ledger.

Once you understand that structure, the entries fall into place. This guide walks through both costs step by step, with sample journal entries for cash basis and accrual basis companies.

The Two Costs: Understanding the Framework

Employee Portion

The employee earns their full gross wages. The health insurance deduction is withheld from their paycheck and sent to the carrier on their behalf. Because it’s still part of gross pay, it flows through Salaries & Wages Expense and creates a short-term liability — Health Insurance Payable, Employee — until the carrier is paid.

Employer Portion

This is a separate, additional cost to the company on top of gross wages. It hits Employee Benefits Expense on the P&L and creates its own liability — Health Insurance Payable, Employer — until remitted to the carrier.

Common mistake: Treating the employee paycheck deduction as a separate expense. It isn’t. If the employee earned $10,000, the company owes $10,000 in wages. The fact that $500 of that goes to a health carrier doesn’t reduce wage expense — it just changes who receives the cash.

Pre-Tax vs. Post-Tax: Why It Changes the Numbers

Before posting any entry, you need to know whether employee health deductions are pre-tax or post-tax — it directly affects payroll tax calculations.

Most employer-sponsored health plans run through a Section 125 Cafeteria Plan, making employee deductions pre-tax for federal income tax and FICA (Social Security and Medicare) purposes. That means:

Section 125 Pre-Tax Impact
  • The employee’s taxable wages are reduced by the deduction amount before calculating withholding.
  • Both the employee and employer save on FICA taxes.
  • The payroll deduction item in QuickBooks must be flagged as pre-tax — or withholding calculations will be wrong.

Pre-Tax FICA Example

An employee earning $10,000 gross with a $500 pre-tax health deduction pays FICA on $9,500 — not $10,000. At a combined 7.65% rate, that’s a $38.25 difference per employee, per pay period. Across a full workforce, those savings add up quickly.

Post-tax deductions — for example, coverage for a domestic partner not recognized federally, or certain voluntary supplemental plans — do not reduce taxable wages and are handled differently. When in doubt, check with your benefits broker or tax advisor.

Sample Scenario: One Pay Period

All journal entries below are based on these payroll facts:

Payroll Scenario — Base Numbers
ItemAmount
Employee gross wages$10,000.00
Employee health ins. deduction$500.00
Federal income tax withheld$1,200.00
Employee Social Security (6.2%)$620.00
Employee Medicare (1.45%)$145.00
Net paycheck to employees$7,535.00
Employer health ins. contribution$1,500.00
Employer Social Security (6.2%)$620.00
Employer Medicare (1.45%)$145.00
FUTA / SUTA (employer)$320.00
Net pay calculation: Gross wages $10,000 − FIT $1,200 − Employee SS $620 − Employee Medicare $145 − Health deduction $500 = Net pay $7,535

Cash Basis Accounting — Three Entries

On a cash basis, you record expenses and liabilities when cash actually moves. Here are the three entries for a typical pay cycle.

Entry 1: Record Payroll Wages, Withholdings & Benefits Obligation

Entry 1 — Cash Basis
AccountDebitCredit
Salaries & Wages Expense$10,000.00
Employee Benefits Expense$1,500.00
Payroll Tax Expense$1,085.00
Federal Income Tax Payable$1,200.00
SS Tax Payable, Employee$620.00
Medicare Tax Payable, Employee$145.00
Health Insurance Payable, Employee$500.00
Health Insurance Payable, Employer$1,500.00
SS Tax Payable, Employer$620.00
Medicare Tax Payable, Employer$145.00
FUTA / SUTA Payable$320.00
Cash, Payroll Checking$7,535.00
Totals$12,585.00$12,585.00
Note: The $10,000 debit to Salaries & Wages captures full gross wages, including the $500 the employee contributes to insurance. Payroll Tax Expense of $1,085 = Employer SS $620 + Employer Medicare $145 + FUTA/SUTA $320.

Entry 2: Remit Payroll Taxes to the IRS

Entry 2 — Cash Basis
AccountDebitCredit
Federal Income Tax Payable$1,200.00
SS Tax Payable, Employee$620.00
Medicare Tax Payable, Employee$145.00
SS Tax Payable, Employer$620.00
Medicare Tax Payable, Employer$145.00
Cash, Operating$2,730.00
Totals$2,730.00$2,730.00

Entry 3: Pay the Health Insurance Carrier

Entry 3 — Cash Basis
AccountDebitCredit
Health Insurance Payable, Employee$500.00
Health Insurance Payable, Employer$1,500.00
Cash, Operating$2,000.00
Totals$2,000.00$2,000.00
Note: The carrier invoice covers both portions. With two separate liability accounts you can confirm you collected the right employee amount and are remitting the correct employer contribution — keeping reconciliation clean.

Accrual Basis Accounting — Four Entries

Under accrual accounting, expenses are recognized when earned or incurred — not when cash changes hands. This is required for companies following GAAP and is common any time a pay period straddles month-end or the insurance invoice arrives in a different period than payroll.

Entry 1: Accrue Wages at Period End (Before Payroll Runs)

Entry 1 — Accrual Basis
AccountDebitCredit
Salaries & Wages Expense$10,000.00
Accrued Salaries Payable$10,000.00
Totals$10,000.00$10,000.00

Entry 2: Accrue Employer Benefits at Period End

Entry 2 — Accrual Basis
AccountDebitCredit
Employee Benefits Expense$1,500.00
Health Insurance Payable, Employer (Accrued)$1,500.00
Totals$1,500.00$1,500.00

Entry 3: Record Payroll When Paid (Clears the Accrual, Books Withholdings)

Entry 3 — Accrual Basis
AccountDebitCredit
Accrued Salaries Payable$10,000.00
Payroll Tax Expense$1,085.00
Federal Income Tax Payable$1,200.00
SS Tax Payable, Employee$620.00
Medicare Tax Payable, Employee$145.00
Health Insurance Payable, Employee$500.00
SS Tax Payable, Employer$620.00
Medicare Tax Payable, Employer$145.00
FUTA / SUTA Payable$320.00
Cash, Payroll Checking$7,535.00
Totals$11,085.00$11,085.00
Note: The Accrued Salaries Payable debit clears the liability from Entry 1. Wage expense was already recognized — this entry records the actual payment and all related withholding liabilities.

Entry 4: Pay the Insurance Carrier (Clears Both Accrued Liabilities)

Entry 4 — Accrual Basis
AccountDebitCredit
Health Insurance Payable, Employee$500.00
Health Insurance Payable, Employer (Accrued)$1,500.00
Cash, Operating$2,000.00
Totals$2,000.00$2,000.00
Critical: Set Your Reversing Entry. When you post a period-end accrual (say, December 31) and payroll runs in January, QuickBooks will book the expense again when the actual payroll entry is created — double-counting it on your P&L. Prevent this by creating a reversing journal entry dated the first day of the new period (January 1). In QuickBooks, check the “Reverse” option on the journal entry. Skipping this step is one of the most common causes of overstated payroll expenses.

QuickBooks Setup: Chart of Accounts & Payroll Items

Getting your chart of accounts right from the start saves hours of cleanup later.

Liability Accounts to Create

Under Current Liabilities, add:

  • Health Insurance Payable, Employee
  • Health Insurance Payable, Employer

Keeping them separate lets you reconcile the carrier invoice against each component independently — and makes it easy to answer an employee who asks how much the company contributed to their coverage this year.

Payroll Items to Configure

  • Employee deduction item: Map to Health Insurance Payable, Employee. Flag as pre-tax (Section 125) if applicable.
  • Company contribution item: Map to Employee Benefits Expense (P&L) and Health Insurance Payable, Employer (balance sheet).

Once configured, both items calculate and post automatically each pay run. You won’t need to create manual journal entries unless you’re on a fully manual bookkeeping workflow.

Section 125 / Cafeteria Plan Reminder

If your plan qualifies under IRC Section 125, the employee deduction item must be flagged as pre-tax in QuickBooks Payroll. This reduces the taxable wage base used to calculate withholding and FICA taxes. Verify this setting with your benefits broker or payroll advisor — an incorrectly coded deduction item produces wrong W-2s and potentially incorrect 941 filings.

Key Takeaways

  1. The employee health deduction is not a separate expense. It flows through Salaries & Wages Expense as part of gross pay. The deduction only changes how the cash is distributed.
  2. The employer contribution is a true additional cost. It belongs in Employee Benefits Expense — not wages.
  3. Use two separate liability accounts — one for each portion — to keep carrier invoice reconciliation clean and your books transparent.
  4. Pre-tax deductions under Section 125 reduce taxable wages for FICA. The deduction item in QuickBooks must be flagged correctly, or W-2s and 941s will be wrong.
  5. On accrual basis, always set a reversing entry to prevent double-counting the wage expense when payroll actually runs.

Managing This for Your Business

Payroll journal entries, benefits accounting, and tax filings have a lot of moving parts — and the margin for error is real. A misclassified deduction item or a missed accrual reversal can create cascading problems that surface at year-end, or worse, during an audit.

AccuPay Systems handles the full payroll cycle on the iSolved HCM platform — including health insurance deductions, employer contribution tracking, tax filings, and general ledger exports that map directly to your accounting software. Your books stay clean, your employees get paid correctly, and you stop worrying about which entry goes where.

Ready to Simplify Your Payroll?

Let AccuPay handle the complexity — from journal entries to tax filings — so you can focus on running your business.

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Frequently Asked Questions
It’s recorded as a credit to Health Insurance Payable, Employee — a current liability account. The offsetting debit flows through Salaries & Wages Expense as part of gross wages. The liability clears when you pay the insurance carrier.
Yes. The employer’s contribution to employee health insurance is recorded as Employee Benefits Expense on the income statement. It’s generally tax-deductible under IRC §162 as an ordinary and necessary business expense. Consult your tax advisor to confirm deductibility in your specific situation.
On cash basis, expenses are recorded when cash is paid. On accrual basis, expenses are recorded when incurred — even if payment comes later. Accrual entries are common when a pay period crosses a month-end or when the insurance invoice arrives in a different period than payroll.
No. The full gross wage is expensed. The deduction only reduces the net cash paid to the employee and creates a short-term liability. Your P&L reflects the true cost of employment, which includes the employee’s full earnings before deductions.
Yes. In QuickBooks Payroll, you create a deduction item for the employee portion and a company contribution item for the employer portion. Each maps to its respective account in the chart of accounts. Once configured, they calculate and post automatically every pay run.
This is exactly when accrual basis accounting matters. At period end, you accrue the expense and record the liability. When the carrier is paid in the following period, you debit the liability and credit cash — keeping the expense in the correct period. On cash basis, the expense simply hits the month the payment is made.
Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or accounting advice. Payroll tax rules and accounting requirements can vary by state and situation. Consult a qualified CPA or payroll professional for guidance specific to your business.

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