Managing customer information accurately is critical to efficient invoicing, payment tracking, and reporting. QuickBooks Online (QBO) offers a simple yet powerful way to create and manage customer profiles. Whether you’re running a small business or managing multiple clients, organizing your customer data within QBO ensures smoother transactions and professional bookkeeping.
This article walks you through the step-by-step process to create a customer in QBO, along with tips to maintain clean, compliant customer records.
Table of Contents
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Why Creating Customers in QuickBooks is Important
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Step-by-Step Guide to Creating a Customer in QuickBooks Online
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Step 1: Log in to QuickBooks Online
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Step 2: Navigate to the Customers Section
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Step 3: Enter Customer Information
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Customer Name and Contact Details
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Billing and Shipping Addresses
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Payment and Billing Preferences
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Tax Information
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Opening Balance and Attachments
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Step 4: Save the Customer Profile
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Why Creating Customers in QuickBooks is Important
Adding customers in QBO helps businesses:
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Track sales, invoices, and payments for each customer
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Maintain a centralized customer database
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Generate detailed financial and customer reports
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Send customized invoices and reminders via email
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Ensure accurate accounting for receivables and tax audits
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Improve customer service and documentation
Step-by-Step Guide to Creating a Customer in QuickBooks Online
Step 1: Log in to QuickBooks Online
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Go to https://quickbooks.intuit.com and click Sign In.
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Enter your email/username and password, then access your company dashboard.
Step 2: Navigate to the Customers Section
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In the left-hand navigation panel, click Sales.
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Select Customers to view your existing customer list.
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Click the New Customer or + New button (top right corner) to begin creating a new profile.
Step 3: Enter Customer Information
A detailed form will open. Fill in the following sections for your new customer.
1. Customer Name and Contact Details
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Display Name As: The name shown on invoices and reports.
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Company Name (optional): For business clients.
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Email Address: Essential if you plan to send invoices or payment reminders via email.
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Phone Number: Primary contact number.
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Mobile Number: Secondary contact, if applicable.
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Fax Number (optional): For customers using fax communication.
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Website (optional): Useful for business customers.
2. Billing and Shipping Addresses
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Billing Address: Required for invoicing and statements.
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Shipping Address: If different from billing, enter it separately.
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Checkbox: Same as Billing Address: Check this if both addresses are the same.
You may also tag addresses by country and province for GST/VAT compliance.
3. Payment and Billing Preferences
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Terms: Select payment terms like Due on Receipt, Net 15, Net 30, or Custom Terms.
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Preferred Payment Method: Choose among Bank Transfer, Credit Card, Cash, Check, or leave blank.
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Preferred Delivery Method: Choose whether to Send Later (email) or Print Later for physical mailing.
4. Tax Information
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Taxable or Non-Taxable: Mark the customer as tax-exempt if applicable and include exemption reasons.
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Sales Tax Code: Assign the correct sales tax code based on the customer’s location and nature of business.
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Resale/Tax ID Number (optional): Useful for B2B clients claiming tax exemptions.
5. Opening Balance and Attachments
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Opening Balance: Enter any previous balance due as of a specific start date (if transitioning from another system).
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Attachments: Upload contracts, ID copies, agreements, or special terms (PDF, JPG, DOC formats supported).
Step 4: Save the Customer Profile
After reviewing the entered information:
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Click Save to finish the process and return to the customer list.
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Or click Save and New to immediately begin entering another customer.
QuickBooks will now track all transactions related to the newly created customer — including sales, payments, credit memos, and communication history.
Pro Tips:
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Keep customer data updated regularly to avoid delivery and billing errors.
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Use custom fields to track additional customer-specific information like loyalty codes or internal IDs.
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Link customer profiles to projects or sub-customers if managing job-based billing.