Create a Record for a Payment Received
Objective
To create a payment received record for an head contract progress claim.
Background
An head contract progress claim is an itemized record of a financial transaction between a project owner and a company responsible for completing work. Typically, it is issued by a general contractor and submitted to a project owner to signal that payment is due for completed work. When you receive a payment from an owner, you can create a record of that payment in Procore's Invoicing tool using the steps below.
Things to Consider
Prerequisites
- The project's head contract must be in the 'Approved' or 'Complete' status. See Approve a Head Contract.
- Create the progress claim that you sent to the owner. See Create Head Contract Progress Claim.
Steps
- Navigate to the project's Invoicing tool.
- Click the Owner-developer tab.
- Locate the owner progress claim in the list. The click to open it.
- Click Create Payment.

- Complete the following fields:
- Progress Claim. Select the associated progress claim from the drop-down list.
- Date. Select a date that the payment was received.
- Payment #. Enter the payment number.
- Progress Claim #. Enter the progress claim number for the payment, if applicable.
- Check #: Enter the check number for the payment.
- Notes. Include any additional notes to provide details about the payment.
- Amount. Enter the amount of the payment received.
- Attachments. Include any attachments related to the payment. For example, you might want to attach the check image or the progress claim file.
- Click Add. The payment is listed under the 'Contract Summary Report' section in the 'Payments Received' column.

- Click Save.
Notes
- You will see a list of all payments received, which you can then export to a PDF by choosing Export > PDF.
- All payments received on the project are tracked in the Contract Summary Report in the Head Contract tool's General tab (see illustration below).


When your company applies the 'Owners English' or 'Specialty Contractors English' point-of-view dictionary, you'll see different tool names and term changes in the user interface. Learn