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    Home » Bookkeeping for a Small Business: A Plain-English Guide to Getting It Right
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    Bookkeeping for a Small Business: A Plain-English Guide to Getting It Right

    Ashley RichardsonBy Ashley RichardsonJune 3, 2026Updated:June 3, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Bookkeeping for a Small Business is the process of recording every financial transaction your business makes, including every sale, every expense, and every payment in and out. It is the foundation of your business finances. Without it, you cannot know your actual profit, file taxes correctly, or make smart decisions about growth.

    Most small businesses that fail financially don’t fail because they weren’t profitable – they fail because they didn’t track their numbers and ran out of cash without seeing it coming. Good bookkeeping doesn’t require an accounting degree. It requires consistency and the right system.

    Bookkeeping vs Accounting: They’re Not the Same

    Bookkeeping Accounting
    What it is Recording transactions day-to-day Interpreting and reporting on the data
    Who does it Owner, bookkeeper, or software Accountant or CPA
    Frequency Daily / weekly Monthly / quarterly / annually
    Output Transaction records, ledgers Financial statements, tax filings
    Complexity Low to medium Medium to high
    Cost (outsourced) $200-$800/month $500-$3,000+/year

    The 5 Core Bookkeeping Tasks Every Small Business Must Do

    1. Record every transaction – Income and expenses logged as they happen. Don’t let it pile up for a month.
    2. Reconcile your bank account – Monthly. Compare your records against your actual bank statement to catch errors, missed entries, or fraud.
    3. Track accounts receivable – Know who owes you money and for how long. Unpaid invoices are one of the top cash flow killers for small businesses.
    4. Track accounts payable – Know what you owe and when it’s due. Missing a supplier payment damages relationships and sometimes incurs penalties.
    5. Categorise expenses correctly – Rent, software, travel, payroll – each has different tax implications. Miscategorising costs you at tax time.

    Cash vs Accrual Accounting: Which One Should You Use?

    Cash Basis Accrual Basis
    Records income when… Cash is received Invoice is issued (earned)
    Records expense when… Cash is paid Expense is incurred
    Best for Freelancers, sole traders, small service businesses Product businesses, those with inventory or credit
    Tax impact Pay tax on what you actually received Pay tax on what you’ve earned (even if unpaid)
    IRS/HMRC requirement Allowed up to ~$26M revenue (US) Required above threshold
    Simplicity Simpler – matches bank balance More accurate picture of profitability

    Best Bookkeeping Tools for Small Businesses

    Tool Best For Price Learning Curve
    QuickBooks Most small businesses, accountant-friendly From $15/mo Medium
    Xero Growing businesses, multi-currency From $13/mo Medium
    Wave Solopreneurs, freelancers Free (invoicing + accounting) Low
    FreshBooks Service businesses, time tracking From $17/mo Low
    Zoho Books Zoho ecosystem users From $0/mo Medium
    Spreadsheet (Excel/Sheets) Brand new businesses, very simple needs Free Low (but error-prone)

    DIY Bookkeeping vs Hiring Someone: When to Switch

    • Do it yourself when: you’re just starting out, revenue is under ~$10K/month, and transactions are simple.
    • Hire a bookkeeper when: you’re spending more than 3-4 hours a week on books, or you’ve made errors that cost you at tax time.
    • Hire an accountant when: you have employees, hold inventory, need financial statements, or are dealing with complex tax situations.

    Monthly Bookkeeping Checklist

    ✓ Task
    ☐ Record all income received this month
    ☐ Record all business expenses
    ☐ Reconcile bank and credit card statements
    ☐ Send or follow up on outstanding invoices
    ☐ Review accounts payable – anything overdue?
    ☐ Categorise all transactions correctly
    ☐ Review profit & loss compared to last month
    ☐ Set aside estimated tax payment (if applicable)

    Good bookkeeping isn’t about being an accountant. It’s about having enough clarity on your numbers that you’re never surprised by your own business.

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    Ashley Richardson

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