Bookkeeping Basics
by @jk-0001
Set up and maintain basic bookkeeping for a solopreneur business. Use when tracking income and expenses, preparing for taxes, managing invoices and receipts, understanding cash flow, or generating financial reports. Covers accounting software selection, chart of accounts, expense categorization, reconciliation, and financial statements. Not professional accounting advice β consult a CPA for complex situations. Trigger on "bookkeeping", "accounting", "track expenses", "financial records", "QuickB
clawhub install bookkeeping-basicsπ About This Skill
name: bookkeeping-basics description: Set up and maintain basic bookkeeping for a solopreneur business. Use when tracking income and expenses, preparing for taxes, managing invoices and receipts, understanding cash flow, or generating financial reports. Covers accounting software selection, chart of accounts, expense categorization, reconciliation, and financial statements. Not professional accounting advice β consult a CPA for complex situations. Trigger on "bookkeeping", "accounting", "track expenses", "financial records", "QuickBooks", "invoicing", "receipts", "profit and loss".
Bookkeeping Basics
Overview
Bookkeeping tracks where money comes from and where it goes. Most solopreneurs hate bookkeeping, so they avoid it β then face chaos at tax time or when applying for loans. This playbook gives you a simple system: minimal time, maximum clarity. Disclaimer: This is educational content, not professional accounting advice. Consult a CPA for complex situations.Step 1: Choose Your Accounting Software
Don't use spreadsheets. Use accounting software. It automates most of the work and keeps you compliant.
Software comparison:
| Software | Best For | Pricing | Learning Curve | Features | |---|---|---|---|---| | Wave | Freelancers, very small businesses | Free (pay for payments/payroll) | Easy | Basic invoicing, expense tracking, reports | | QuickBooks Online | Most solopreneurs, scaling businesses | $15-50/month | Medium | Full accounting, invoicing, tax reports, integrations | | FreshBooks | Service businesses, invoicing-heavy | $17-55/month | Easy | Invoicing, time tracking, expense tracking | | Xero | International businesses, contractors | $13-70/month | Medium | Full accounting, multi-currency, payroll |
Selection guide:
Recommendation: Start with Wave (free). Upgrade to QuickBooks when you hit $50K revenue or need more features.
Step 2: Set Up Your Chart of Accounts
A chart of accounts is a list of categories for organizing income and expenses. Most software comes with defaults β use them unless you have a specific reason to customize.
Basic chart of accounts (solopreneur):
INCOME CATEGORIES:
EXPENSE CATEGORIES:
Rule: Don't over-categorize. 10-15 categories max. Too many creates confusion. Too few makes tax prep hard.
Step 3: Track Every Transaction
Every dollar in and every dollar out must be recorded. No exceptions.
Income tracking:
Expense tracking:
Receipt rules (IRS):
Bank/credit card reconciliation (monthly): Reconciliation = matching your accounting software records to your actual bank statements.
How to reconcile (15-30 min/month): 1. Download bank statement for the month 2. Open your accounting software's reconciliation tool 3. Check off each transaction in software that matches the bank statement 4. Investigate any mismatches (missing transactions, duplicate entries) 5. Mark reconciliation as complete
Why this matters: Catches errors, fraud, or missed transactions. If software balance β bank balance, something's wrong.
Step 4: Separate Business and Personal Finances
NEVER mix business and personal money. It's the #1 bookkeeping mistake.
Why separation matters:
How to separate:
If you accidentally pay a personal expense from business account: 1. Record it as "Owner's Draw" or "Personal Expense" in your bookkeeping 2. Don't try to deduct it on taxes (it's not a business expense)
Step 5: Understand Basic Financial Statements
Your accounting software generates these automatically. You should review them monthly.
Profit & Loss (P&L) / Income Statement
Shows: Revenue - Expenses = Profit (or Loss)What it tells you: Are you making money? Which expense categories are highest?
Example:
Revenue: $10,000
Expenses:
Marketing: $2,000
Software: $500
Contractor: $3,000
Other: $1,000
Total Expenses: $6,500
Net Profit: $3,500
How to use it:
Balance Sheet
Shows: Assets = Liabilities + EquityWhat it tells you: What you own (assets), what you owe (liabilities), and what's left over (equity/net worth).
Most solopreneurs can ignore this unless applying for a loan or raising funding.
Cash Flow Statement
Shows: Cash in - Cash out = Net cash flowWhat it tells you: Are you running out of cash? (even profitable businesses can have cash flow problems if customers pay late)
How to use it:
Step 6: Prepare for Tax Time
Good bookkeeping makes tax prep fast and cheap. Bad bookkeeping means expensive CPA hours or IRS penalties.
Tax prep checklist (do this all year, not just at tax time):
Common deductible expenses (U.S.):
Non-deductible (can't write off):
Rule: When in doubt, ask your CPA. Don't guess on deductions.
Step 7: Monthly Bookkeeping Routine (30-60 min/month)
Consistency prevents end-of-year chaos. Do these tasks monthly:
Monthly bookkeeping checklist:
Time required: 30 min if your bookkeeping is current. 3 hours if you've been ignoring it.
Rule: Do this monthly. Don't wait until tax season.
Step 8: When to Hire a Bookkeeper or CPA
DIY bookkeeping works if:
Hire a bookkeeper if:
Cost: Virtual bookkeeper = $200-500/month. Worth it if it saves you 5+ hours/month.
Hire a CPA (tax accountant) if:
Cost: CPA = $500-2,000/year for tax prep. More if you need year-round advice.
Rule: DIY bookkeeping is fine. DIY taxes past $50K revenue is risky. Hire a CPA.