6 Common Bookkeeping Mistakes to Avoid

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6 Common Bookkeeping Mistakes to Avoid

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6 Common Bookkeeping Mistakes to Avoid

Bookkeeping is a crucial aspect of business management that can make or break your financial success. This article highlights common bookkeeping mistakes and provides expert-backed solutions to help you avoid them. By implementing these insights, you can streamline your financial processes and improve your business’s overall financial health.

  • Integrate Tax Strategy into Bookkeeping
  • Track Costs by Smallest Meaningful Unit
  • Set Up Automated Invoicing Reminders
  • Switch to Accrual Accounting for Accuracy
  • Separate Personal and Business Expenses
  • Correctly Categorize Family Vacation Expenses

Integrate Tax Strategy into Bookkeeping

One of my biggest bookkeeping mistakes was trusting that my bookkeeper understood tax strategy. Early in my practice, I found clients were consistently overpaying taxes because their bookkeepers were simply recording transactions without understanding tax implications. I had made the same error myself.

I overcame this by developing a comprehensive system where my bookkeepers, tax accountants, and business advisors communicate regularly rather than operating in silos. When these professionals collaborate, we catch deductions that would otherwise be missed and can properly categorize expenses before year-end when it’s still possible to make adjustments.

The key learning is that bookkeeping isn’t just about recording transactions – it’s about strategic categorization that maximizes legitimate tax savings. For example, I had a client who saved over $12,000 annually once we properly documented their home office deductions, business travel, and redirected living expenses that were partially business-related.

I recommend implementing a mobile-based expense tracking solution immediately (we use Hurdlr with our clients) that allows you to capture receipts in real-time and properly categorize expenses on the go. This audit-proofing strategy ensures you never scramble for documentation and can confidently claim every deduction you’re legally entitled to.

Courtney EppsCourtney Epps
Owner, OTB Tax


Track Costs by Smallest Meaningful Unit

My biggest bookkeeping mistake happened in 1995 when I was manually tracking supply costs and labor hours on paper across different cleaning crews. I was just dumping all supply expenses into one category and couldn’t figure out why some crew days were profitable while others barely broke even.

The reality hit when I spent three days trying to calculate our actual profit margins for a potential commercial contract bid. I found one crew was using 40% more supplies than others because they weren’t trained on proper dilution ratios for our all-natural cleaning solutions. Meanwhile, another crew was taking 2-3 hours longer per house because of inefficient routing.

I immediately started tracking supplies by crew and timing each service type separately. Within a month, I identified that our bi-weekly cleanings were actually 25% more profitable per hour than one-time deep cleans, even though deep cleans had higher ticket prices. This data completely changed how I priced services and scheduled crews.

The lesson: separate your costs by the smallest meaningful unit in your business. For me, that meant crew-by-crew tracking instead of company-wide averages. This granular approach helped me grow from one home per day to multiple crews serving hundreds of homes across five counties.

Dawn ZapfDawn Zapf
Owner, Executive Maids


Set Up Automated Invoicing Reminders

Ah, bookkeeping—the glamorous side of entrepreneurship no one warns you about. One of my biggest mistakes? Forgetting to invoice a client. For three months. I kept thinking, “Did I send that invoice? I must have… probably?” Spoiler alert: I did not.

By the time I realized it, I was basically three jobs in and politely trying to ask for payment without sounding like I’d just discovered email. It was awkward, to say the least. Luckily, the client was understanding (and thankfully organized on their end), but it was a wake-up call.

I fixed it by setting up automated invoicing reminders and treating bookkeeping like a non-negotiable part of my weekly routine—right up there with caffeine and clean uniforms.

Lesson learned? If you don’t bill, you won’t get paid. And no, mental invoices don’t count. Treat your financials like a client—they need attention, consistency, and yes, actual follow-through.

Todd AndersonTodd Anderson
Owner, Cascade Cleaning Services


Switch to Accrual Accounting for Accuracy

One of the biggest bookkeeping mistakes I made early on was relying on cash accounting. Initially, it seemed straightforward—simply recording revenue when money hit the bank and expenses when payments went out. However, I soon realized that this method distorted the financial reality of the business. For example, cash accounting can make revenues appear inflated when receiving upfront payments or deposits, giving a misleading sense of profitability. Conversely, expenses such as rent, utilities, or vendor invoices that have been incurred but not yet paid wouldn’t show up, causing the business to seem artificially healthier than it actually was.

Switching to accrual accounting corrected this. Modern accounting platforms like QuickBooks or DualEntry make accrual accounting effortless, automatically recording revenues when earned and expenses when incurred, regardless of cash flow timing. This simple shift provided a clear, accurate view of financial performance and enabled better strategic decision-making and forecasting.

The key takeaway: accrual accounting is essential if you want a true understanding of your company’s financial health.

Santiago NestaresSantiago Nestares
Cofounder, DualEntry


Separate Personal and Business Expenses

One bookkeeping mistake I made as a small business owner was not keeping personal and business expenses separate. In the early days of my business, I used the same account for both personal and business transactions, which made it a nightmare to track and categorize expenses accurately. This led to confusion during tax season, potential discrepancies in financial records, and wasted time trying to sort through everything.

Realizing this mistake, I immediately set up separate bank accounts for personal and business use. This simple change made a significant difference in maintaining clean and organized financial records. It not only simplified bookkeeping but also provided a clear distinction between personal and business finances, ensuring accurate financial reporting and facilitating budgeting and forecasting.

This experience taught me the importance of establishing clear boundaries between personal and business finances from the start. Proper bookkeeping practices, such as keeping separate accounts, can save time, reduce stress, and help in making informed financial decisions for the business’s growth.

Gauri ManglikGauri Manglik
CEO and Co-Founder, Instrumentl


Correctly Categorize Family Vacation Expenses

meals and entertainment vs. business travel.  I’m a small business and write off as much as possible and one thing I do each year is write off my family vacations because we all work in the business and discuss business all the time, but I learned the hard way that that is NOT business travel and the M&E deduction is far less, but more appropriate for our vacations.

Veronica CockerhamVeronica Cockerham
Owner/Founder, Apple Blossom Gift Baskets


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