WOW BookSwitch LogoWOW BookSwitch
Migration Guide

US Retention Requirements: What Firms Owe the IRS and the States Before, During, and After a QuickBooks to Xero Migration

Published: June 12, 2026 | Last updated: June 12, 2026 | Reviewed by Vincenzo Schembri, CPA

The Question That Trips Up US Firms

US accounting firms planning a QuickBooks Desktop to Xero migration usually have a clear handle on the conversion mechanics. They know what transfers, what does not, how long the conversion takes, and the price per file.

The retention question gets less attention. Most firms know the IRS expects records to be kept. Fewer have a written process that handles the variation across return types, the state-level layer on top of the federal baseline, and the post-Wayfair sales tax record-keeping that now applies to clients with multi-state operations.

That gap matters. An IRS audit covering a pre-migration period reaches into the archived QuickBooks Desktop file, not the live Xero data. If the archive cannot be produced, the exposure is the firm's.

This article works through US retention rules in the context of a QuickBooks to Xero migration directly. The IRS framework, the state-level patchwork, and what a defensible retention process looks like at go-live.

Why the Migration and the Retention Obligation Are Two Separate Questions

The most common misunderstanding: the QuickBooks Desktop to Xero migration is about the live working data going forward. The retention obligation covers the historical records of the pre-migration period.

These are two separate things. Migrating three years of history into Xero does not satisfy a seven-year retention default. Archiving the QBD source file does. A firm that treats the migration as closure on the pre-migration data is exposed if the IRS or a state revenue department ever asks for records covering an earlier period.

The IRS Framework: Why There Is No Single Number

Unlike Canada's clean six-year rule under the Income Tax Act, the IRS does not impose a single flat retention period. The rules vary by return type and by issue.

The Three-Year Baseline

For most returns, the IRS standard is three years from the date the return was filed. This applies to ordinary income tax returns with no understatement of income or extending circumstance.

Six Years for Significant Understatement

If income may have been underreported by more than 25% of gross income, the IRS recommends retaining records for at least six years. This reflects the IRS's extended assessment authority under Internal Revenue Code Section 6501(e).

Seven Years for Bad Debt and Worthless Securities

For records related to bad debt deductions or claims of worthless securities, the IRS recommends seven years. Most operating businesses have at least some exposure: extended accounts receivable, write-offs, or investments that may need to be written down.

Four Years for Employment Tax Records

Employment tax records, including records of wages paid, tips, withheld taxes, and Forms W-2, W-3, and 941, should be kept for at least four years after the tax becomes due or is paid, whichever is later.

Indefinite for Records Supporting Property Basis

Records that establish the basis in property, the cost of fixed assets, and the basis in business interests should be kept indefinitely, or until the period of limitations expires for the year the property is disposed of.

The Practical Default: Seven Years

For US firms advising clients on how long to retain the archived QuickBooks Desktop file after a Xero migration, a seven-year default covers the most extended IRS standard window for most operating businesses. It typically also covers state-level requirements without case-by-case determination.

Some clients warrant a longer hold. Property records and basis documentation should be retained for the life of the asset plus the limitations window. A seven-year default applied uniformly is defensible, simple to document, and avoids under-retaining records the IRS would have wanted to see.

The State-Level Layer Most Firms Underweight

Federal retention rules are only part of the picture. Every state with an income tax has its own retention requirements, and several extend beyond the federal baseline. California, New York, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and Illinois each have their own provisions. For firms with clients across multiple states, the highest applicable retention period sets the floor.

Post-Wayfair Sales Tax Records

This is the area that has changed most dramatically since 2018. The Supreme Court's decision in South Dakota v. Wayfair established that states can require sales tax collection from businesses with economic nexus, even without physical presence.

A client with sales into ten states under economic nexus thresholds has ten separate sales tax records to retain, often with different retention periods per jurisdiction. The QuickBooks Desktop file is typically the most detailed source of the transaction-level data each state would need to verify a filing. That data lives in the QBD archive after migration. It does not transfer into Xero in a queryable form.

For firms with multi-state clients, post-Wayfair sales tax retention often becomes the most demanding piece of the records picture.

What "Retaining the QBD File" Actually Requires

The File Must Be Openable

A QuickBooks Desktop file on a backup drive that no current QBD installation can open is not a usable archive. After Intuit's confirmed end-of-support timeline (QBD 2022 ended May 2025, QBD 2023 ended May 2026, QBD 2024 reaches end of support in September 2027), the question of who can still open a legacy QBD file becomes operational, not theoretical.

The practical implication: alongside the archived .QBW file, produce and store a complete set of standard exports in human-readable formats. PDF financial statements, CSV transaction exports, a trial balance as at the migration date, and a general ledger covering the full historical period. These exports do not depend on QuickBooks Desktop being available to read them.

The Archive Must Be Documented

A retention archive that nobody can find is not an archive. The client file should include the archive location, the coverage dates, the migration date, and the calculated retention end date based on the longest applicable rule across federal and state requirements.

Disposal Must Be Deliberate

Retention is not indefinite. Once the applicable retention window has expired and no extending circumstance applies, the archive can be disposed of. Disposal should be documented just as the retention was. For records supporting property basis, that disposal may never happen.

The Migration Day Checklist for US Firms

Before the converted Xero file goes live, the firm should confirm the following items are complete.

The QuickBooks Desktop source file is backed up to a verified location. Label the backup with client name, coverage dates, and backup date. Test that the backup can be opened with the firm's available QBD installation.

Standard exports have been produced from QBD and stored alongside the source file. At minimum: trial balance, balance sheet, profit and loss, general ledger, sales tax history by jurisdiction, and employment tax records covering the full retention window. PDF for archival, CSV for data flexibility.

The archive location is documented in the client file. Include the calculated retention end date applying the longest relevant rule across federal and state requirements. Default to seven years unless property basis, ongoing IRS activity, or state extension drives a longer hold.

The client has been informed. The client should know their QuickBooks Desktop records are being archived, not deleted, and remain the system of record for all pre-migration periods.

The Xero backup is in place. Six months of WOW Backup and Restore is included with every WOW BookSwitch conversion. The pre-migration archive and the post-migration backup together provide continuous coverage across the full retention window.

A Real-World Scenario

A US accounting firm is migrating a mid-size retail client off QuickBooks Desktop in 2026. The client sells into 12 states with economic nexus in each. The QBD file covers eight years of transaction history. The client has standard accounts receivable write-offs and employs 35 people.

The migration brings the current fiscal year plus three prior years into Xero through the WOW BookSwitch base package. Extended history for an additional four years is added at $100 USD per year, supporting comparative reporting back to 2018.

The retention picture at go-live applies a seven-year default given the bad debt deduction history. State sales tax records by jurisdiction are exported separately to support post-Wayfair audit exposure across the 12 states. Employment tax records are confirmed against the four-year minimum. The archive documentation shows the retention end date calculated as 2033 and the rationale for the seven-year hold. That is what a defensible retention process looks like for a US client with multi-state exposure.

How a Professional Migration Service Supports the Retention Picture

WOW BookSwitch converts the QuickBooks Desktop file into Xero accurately, with AI validation comparing the trial balance, balance sheet, and profit and loss against the QBD source. Trained accountants apply correcting entries before delivery. US client conversions route through AWS US infrastructure.

The QBD source file itself is the firm's responsibility to archive. The conversion service transforms the data into Xero format for going-forward use. It does not replace the archive. That distinction matters when the firm is documenting its retention process for IRS, state revenue department, or professional liability purposes.

Ready to Plan a Compliant Migration?

WOW BookSwitch offers a free portfolio assessment for US accounting firms. The assessment confirms what transfers cleanly into Xero and what stays in the QBD archive under the IRS retention framework and any applicable state requirements.

wowbookswitch.com

$399 USD per conversion │ 15% volume discount at 30+ files │ Extended history at $100 per additional year

1–3 business day turnaround │ 95% accuracy guarantee │ AI validation plus trained accountant review │ AWS US routing │ Six months WOW Backup and Restore included

Frequently Asked Questions

1. Does migrating to Xero reset the IRS retention clock on QuickBooks Desktop records? No. The retention obligation runs from the date of each return filed, not from the date of migration. A QBD file covering returns from 2019 through 2025 carries retention obligations running well past the migration date for each individual return covered.

2. What is the minimum retention period for US business records? The IRS baseline is three years from the date the return was filed, extending to six years if income may have been underreported by more than 25% of gross income, and seven years for records related to bad debt deductions or worthless securities claims. Employment tax records have a four-year minimum. Property basis records should be retained indefinitely.

3. What is the practical default most US firms apply? Seven years from the date of each return covered by the file. This covers the most extended IRS standard window for most operating businesses and typically satisfies state-level requirements without case-by-case determination.

4. Can I delete the QuickBooks Desktop file after the migration is complete? No. The QBD source file contains the authoritative records for all pre-migration periods. Deleting it before the applicable retention window expires creates IRS and state exposure. The file must be archived in an accessible format for the full period.

5. How does post-Wayfair sales tax affect retention? Substantially. Clients with economic nexus across multiple states have separate sales tax records per jurisdiction, each potentially subject to different retention periods. The QBD file is typically the most detailed source of the transaction-level data needed to support multi-state filings.

6. Does retaining the QBD file in cloud storage satisfy IRS requirements? Yes, provided the file remains accessible and producible. The IRS accepts electronic records maintained in cloud storage. The key requirements are that the records be retained in a format the IRS can examine and that they be producible on request.

7. What happens if an IRS audit covers a period before the migration to Xero? The auditor requests records from the pre-migration period. The firm produces the QBD source file or a complete, readable export covering that period. If the archive is missing or unreadable, the business is exposed to an IRS finding of inadequate records, which can extend the assessment period and limit defenses.

8. Does WOW BookSwitch retain the QBD source file? No. WOW BookSwitch converts the QBD data into Xero format and delivers the validated Xero organization. The QBD source file remains the firm's responsibility to archive. The migration service handles the conversion. The retention is the firm's role.

9. How does WOW Backup and Restore fit into the retention picture? WOW Backup and Restore protects the post-migration Xero data with daily backups. Six months is included with every WOW BookSwitch conversion. It covers the live Xero organization going forward but does not replace the separate obligation to archive the pre-migration QBD source file.

10. Is conversion data routed through US infrastructure for US clients? Yes. WOW BookSwitch routes US client conversions through AWS US infrastructure. The conversion does not move data outside US jurisdiction during processing.

$399 per file · Accountant-reviewed
Get Quote

Ready to Migrate to Xero?

Get expert help with your QuickBooks Desktop to Xero migration. Includes six months of free WOW Backup and Restore.

More Articles

Migration Guide

Canadian Retention Requirements: What Firms Owe the CRA Before, During, and After a QuickBooks to Xero Migration

What Canadian accounting firms must keep, archive, and prove when running a QuickBooks to Xero migration. CRA retention rules made practical.

Read article
Migration Guide

Does Xero Offer a Desktop Version? What QuickBooks Users Need to Know Before Migrating

No, Xero has no desktop version. Here is what that actually means for QuickBooks Desktop users planning a migration, and what changes in your workflow.

Read article
Migration Guide

QuickBooks Desktop vs Xero: The Honest Side-by-Side Canadian Firms Are Looking For

Honest QuickBooks Desktop vs Xero comparison for Canadian firms. CRA compliance, PIPEDA, costs, and where each platform actually wins or loses.

Read article

Looking for Automated Xero Backups?

WOW BookSwitch is a proud subsidiary of WOWBackupAndRestore.com, providing automated backup and restore services for Xero customers, protecting financial data with automated daily backups.

Visit WOWBackupAndRestore.com