Overview
If your employer splits your direct deposit between accounts—sending part of your paycheck to savings—you can include that transfer in your Paycheck Series.
This lets you:
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Track both deposits accurately
-
Keep your Spending Plan clean
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Automatically record the transfer each pay period
Once set up, both the checking deposit and savings transfer are created automatically when the Series matches a transaction.
How it Works
When you add a transfer as a split in your Paycheck Series, Quicken automatically creates:
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A deposit reminder in your checking account (net pay after deductions and transfer)
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A transfer reminder in your savings account
Each is tracked independently, so:
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Your checking account shows exactly what was deposited
-
Your savings account shows the incoming transfer
No manual entry is required.
How Transfers Affect Your Spending Plan
Transfers between your own accounts are excluded from your Spending Plan and reports.
This prevents:
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Inflated income totals
-
Distorted budget calculations
Your Spending Plan will show only the net deposit into checking—the amount available to spend.
Add a Savings Transfer to Your Splits
Follow the same steps used to set up paycheck splits.
When assigning splits:
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Add your gross income and deductions as usual
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Select + Split to add a new row
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In Category, select your savings account (this creates a transfer)
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Enter the transfer amount
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Set the final Personal Income row to Overflow
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Confirm Left to Split = $0.00
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Select Continue, then Create or Update
Your savings transfer will now be included automatically in future paychecks.
Example
Maria is paid biweekly and automatically transfers part of her paycheck to savings.
Gross pay: $2,400.00
|
Category |
Amount |
|---|---|
|
Personal Income |
+$2,400.00 |
|
Federal tax |
$240.00 |
|
State tax |
$96.00 |
|
Social Security |
$148.80 |
|
Medicare |
$34.80 |
|
Transfer: Joint Savings |
$300.00 |
|
Personal Income (Overflow) |
Overflow |
Net deposit into checking (Series amount): $1,580.40
The math:
$2,400.00 − $818.60 (taxes/deductions) − $300.00 (transfer) = $1,580.40
Left to Split = $0.00 ✓
Quicken creates:
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A $1,580.40 deposit in checking
-
A $300.00 transfer to savings
Maria’s Spending Plan reflects $1,580.40 (available to spend), while her savings account shows the $300.00 transfer.
Tips
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Expect two reminders
You’ll see one for the checking deposit and one for the savings transfer. This is expected—not a duplicate. -
Transfer amount changed?
Update the split amount to match your new direct deposit setup. -
Multiple savings accounts?
Add multiple transfer rows—each creates its own reminder. -
Using percentages?
If your employer splits by percentage, use a typical dollar amount and rely on Overflow to adjust for variations. -
Transfer not appearing?
Confirm the split row is linked to the correct account and that the account is connected.
Related topics
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Set up a Paycheck Series with splits
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Understanding Income Series
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Working with the Spending Plan
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Update your Paycheck Series after a pay change