How To Fix Rejected Bank Transfers in QuickBooks Online
Rejected bank transfers (ACH/bank payments) in QuickBooks Online are fixed by: identifying the failed payment, reversing it correctly in QuickBooks, and then recharging or recording a new payment so your books and bank match.
Step 1: Confirm what failed
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Check if this is a customer bank payment via QuickBooks Payments (ACH on an invoice), not just a bank feed error.
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Go to Sales → All sales / Customers → Invoices, open the invoice, and look at the payment status (e.g., “Rejected,” “Failed,” “Returned NSF”).
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Note the reason code (insufficient funds, invalid account, unauthorized, etc.) so you know whether to reattempt or ask for a different payment method.
Step 2: Understand if money ever hit your bank
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If the payment was never deposited (QuickBooks shows it failed and your bank never received it), you usually just need to remove/void the payment in QuickBooks so the invoice goes back to open.
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If the payment was deposited and then reversed (a return/chargeback/NSF), you must record both:
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The reversal leaving your bank.
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The re-open of the customer’s invoice (and any fees).
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Step 3: Remove or reverse the original payment in QBO
For payments processed through QuickBooks Payments (bank transfer/ACH):
Open the original invoice.
Click the payment link at the top (the linked bank payment).
In the payment window:
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If QuickBooks created a separate “Rejected bank transfer” entry, follow the “Fix a rejected bank transfer payment” workflow to link that to the correct invoice.
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If the payment itself must be removed, choose More → Delete (or Void if available) to detach it so the invoice returns to Open.
This prevents the rejected payment from continuing to show as applied or causing “Attention needed” in Payments.
Step 4: Record the bank reversal and any fees
When the bank pulls the money back or charges a returned item fee:
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In + New → Expense (or Bank Deposit/Journal, depending on your workflow):
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Payee: your bank or QuickBooks Payments.
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Payment account: the bank account where the deposit came in.
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Category:
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For the reversal of the customer payment, use the same income/clearing account that the deposit originally used (often “Undeposited Funds” or your income account, per your accountant’s setup).
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For fees, use a Bank service charges / Merchant fees expense account.
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This makes your bank balance in QuickBooks match the actual deposit minus any reversal and fees.
Step 5: Re-open or re-invoice the customer and take new payment
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Verify that the original invoice now shows as Open after removing the failed payment.
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Ask the customer for:
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Updated bank details (if routing/account were wrong or account closed).
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A different payment method (card, check) if there were insufficient funds or authorization issues.
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Record the new payment:
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If paying online, let them pay the existing open invoice through QuickBooks Payments again.
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If paying offline (check, cash), use + New → Receive payment, select the customer and invoice, choose the payment method, and save.
Step 6: If “Attention needed” or errors persist
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Make sure every step in the “Fix rejected bank transfers in QuickBooks Online” workflow is followed: identify the rejected payment, create any needed tracking item/invoice, move the payment correctly, and attach it to an expense if required.
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If the invoice still shows paid or an “Attention needed” banner remains after you redo the steps, Intuit recommends contacting QuickBooks Payments support, as they can see the processor-level status and clear stuck transactions.
If you describe your exact scenario (invoice paid by ACH vs deposit reversed, and what status you see), a more tailored, line-by-line set of clicks for your version of QuickBooks Online can be provided.



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