7 Bookkeeping Mistakes Small Business Owners Make (And How to Fix Them)
These common bookkeeping mistakes cost small business owners money, time, and peace of mind. Learn how to spot them and fix them before they become bigger problems.
Even well-intentioned business owners make bookkeeping mistakes. The problem is that small errors compound over time — and by the time you notice, the cleanup can be expensive. Here are the seven most common mistakes and how to avoid them.
1. Mixing Personal and Business Finances
Using your personal bank account for business transactions (or vice versa) is the #1 bookkeeping mistake. It makes reconciliation a nightmare, creates tax problems, and can expose you to personal liability.
Fix: Open a dedicated business checking account and use it exclusively for business.
2. Not Reconciling Monthly
Skipping bank reconciliation means errors and fraud go undetected. One missed transaction can throw off your entire balance.
Fix: Reconcile every account every month, without exception.
3. Miscategorizing Expenses
Putting expenses in the wrong category distorts your financial reports and can cause you to miss deductions or claim ones you're not entitled to.
Fix: Use a well-organized chart of accounts and review categorizations regularly.
4. Falling Behind on Data Entry
When you let transactions pile up for weeks or months, catching up becomes a major project — and the longer you wait, the harder it is to remember what each transaction was for.
Fix: Enter transactions weekly, or use bank feeds in QuickBooks Online to automate the process.
5. Not Keeping Receipts
The IRS requires documentation for business expenses. "I remember buying that" isn't enough in an audit.
Fix: Use a receipt scanning app or QuickBooks Online's receipt capture feature to store digital copies.
6. Ignoring Accounts Receivable
Sending invoices and forgetting about them means money sitting uncollected. Outstanding receivables hurt your cash flow even if your P&L looks healthy.
Fix: Review your A/R aging report weekly and follow up on overdue invoices promptly.
7. Trying to Do It All Yourself as You Grow
DIY bookkeeping works when you're small. But as your business grows, the time cost and risk of errors increase. Many business owners reach a point where their time is worth more than the cost of a bookkeeper.
Fix: Hire a professional bookkeeper before the mess gets out of hand — not after.
Already behind on your books? Our Year-End Books Cleanup service gets you caught up for a flat $800. Pay now or contact us to get started.
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The Gap ProAdvisors
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