Home Service and Trade Accounting 101
Whether you’re launching your first business or you’re a seasoned pro, small business accounting can feel overwhelming. Your business finances impact your decision making, budgeting, financial planning and taxes so it’s important that your books are accurate.
Before we dive in, let’s cover some accounting terminology that will be used frequently.
Revenue: The amount of money or income generated by a company’s normal business operations before any expenses are deducted. Revenue is also often referred to as Sales. Some examples of revenue are completed jobs, service calls, maintenance contracts and product sales.
Expense: The money a business spends to operate, provide services, or generate revenue. Some examples of expenses are rent and utilities, payroll, software expenses (like Jobber or QuickBooks), or small tools and equipment.
Profit: Is the money the business keeps after paying all expenses.
Profit = Revenue - Expenses
Asset: Something your business owns that has value and can help the business make money. This can be work trucks and equipment, cash in the bank, accounts receivable or larger tools and machinery.
Liability: Something that the business owes - money or obligations the business is responsible for paying. This can be unpaid bills, payroll taxes due, business loans or customer deposits you haven’t earned yet.
Equity: is the value of your business after subtracting what the business owes (liabilities) vs what the business owns (assets). Equity might include cash invested, ownership stake, vehicles or equipment fully owned or profits kept in the business.
Accounts Receivable: The amount of money customers owe the business but has not yet been collected. This might include unpaid customer invoices, service contracts billed but not collected or completed jobs that have not yet been paid for.
Accounts Payable: The amount of money the business owes others. This might include supplier invoices, utilities not yet paid, equipment rental charges or bills from subcontractors.
Chart of Accounts: Is a structured list of all the accounts the company uses to record financial transactions.
Now that we have covered some basic accounting terminology, let’s see how they are used in financial statements.
Financial Statements
Financial statements are very important to business owners for three reasons:
Management Reporting: shows business owners how well the business is performing and when accurate helps drive decision making.
Taxes: Accurate financial reports are needed for you and/or your business to file taxes. Statements help the tax preparer identify deductions and avoid overpaying.
Financing: If your business needs equipment financing, loan or a credit line, lenders will ask for financial statements.
There are three financial statements you need to know:
1. Income statement (profit & Loss or P&L)
2. Balance Sheet
3. Statement of Cash Flows
Income Statement or Profit and Loss
This is the simplest and most reviewed report out of the three.
The P&L report shows a business’s revenues, costs, and expenses over a specific period. The primary goal of this report is to show whether the business made a profit or incurred a loss during that time frame.
The report will list revenue at the top, costs and expenses in the middle and the profit or loss will be at the bottom.
It’s important that small businesses owners review their P&L at least once a month. It gives information and insights into how the business is performing so you can make smart decisions.
Balance Sheet
The Balance Sheet is a financial statement that shows a business’s financial position. It gives a snapshot of what the business owns (assets), owes (liabilities) and what’s left over (owner’s equity).
Unlike the P&L, the balance sheet shows the company’s financial position for one specific day rather than a date range. For the best results, balance sheets are typically ran for the last day in the month, quarter or year.
Smaller businesses with no employees or side hustles don’t need to check the balance sheet as much as it is simple and typically doesn’t change much. As the business grows owners will need to include the balance sheet in their reviews for strategic planning.
Statement of Cash Flow
This report is generally the least used by small business owners but is still important. The statement of cash flow shows how cash moves in and out of the business over a specific time. It helps understand how well your business generates cash to pay bills, fund operations and invest in growth.
It’s divided into three sections:
1. Operating Cashflow
2. Investing Cashflow
3. Financing Cashflow
This Financial statement is important because it shows cash inflows and outflows that wouldn’t be included in the P&L.
An example of this would be the purchase of a company vehicle or large piece of equipment. A vehicle or large piece of equipment is considered an asset so the purchase and related loan payments would be captured in the statement of cash flows and balance sheet. Even though it is a cash expense at the time of purchase, it is not expensed on the P&L all at once.
Tracking Business Transactions and documentation
Tracking business transactions has to be done at least once a year for tax purposes. You will need to know total revenues, total expenses by category and total profit.
It’s standard practice to import and categorize transactions and report financial monthly, although businesses just starting out or side-hustle with low volume of transaction activity can do it less frequently (quarterly or even annually in some cases).
Be sure to have separate business bank and credit card accounts used solely for business transactions. Intermingling business with personal transactions makes it difficult to track true business performance, can result in missed deductions coming tax season and can weaken legal protection.
Businesses also need to keep proper documents and support for all business transactions to prove they are valid deductions in case of an IRS audit. If you get caught in an IRS audit they can disallow your deductions and you will have to pay the difference plus penalties and interest, which can add up quickly.
Here are some of the following documents that help prove business deductions:
· Bank and credit card statements
· Customer invoices and payments
· Bills
· Receipts
· Sales Receipts
· Payroll support
· 1099 Forms
· Cancelled Checks
If you are unsure, scan the document and save it in a central location separated by tax year. Even if you are scanning and uploading these to a cloud location, I recommend keeping the physical copy as well.
There is also receipt management software that manages this very well. QuickBooks Online and Expensify are solid options as software solutions if you don’t want to do this manually.
Bonus Tip: At Swanson CFO we help manage this for our clients by having a dedicated portal that receipts can be uploaded to that automatically imports to the accounting file, essentially automating the process.
Completing your Monthly Bookkeeping
Set up Accounting Software
For starters you will need to get a subscription to an accounting software. For service-based business owners I only recommend QuickBooks Online. They are currently the gold standard for bookkeeping software and can integrate with other third-party platforms like Jobber and Gusto. These integrations make streamlining processes much easier. It will take some time, but you can teach yourself how to use the software. QuickBooks has an abundance of resources to help users learn to navigate their platform.
There is other bookkeeping software out there, but most don’t integrate with third party platforms. If you are adamant about not using QuickBooks, Xero is the best alternative. It has many of the same integrations and is a slightly cheaper option but is lacking in areas that QuickBooks does well.
Set up a customized chart of accounts
A customized chart of accounts makes reading your financials 10 times easier.
A chart of accounts typically is divided into 5 main account types:
· Assets
· Liabilities
· Revenue
· Expenses
· Equity
Customize the account list to make sure it fits the needs of the business. Make sure to update and review regularly.
Organize your financial Records
You need to have clear information to know where you stand, as well as what and what not to focus on.
1. Get a QuickBooks Online subscription
2. Record all transactions and track all your records in QuickBooks (income, expenses, bank deposits, etc.)
3. Review and update transactions weekly. On a monthly basis reconcile all transactions as well as create financial reports. These reports should be reviewed at least monthly. Annually, prepare reports for comprehensive review of years performance and tax filings.
4. If you decide to do the DIY route: Each month make sure that all transactions are reconciled to the business bank and credit card accounts, it is very import for tax prep purposes.
No QuickBooks Subscription?
If you are just starting out and you don’t have enough revenue to justify a QuickBooks subscription, Excel is an alternative.
Excel can be used to track revenues and expenses for businesses just starting out or having low volume of transactions. It doesn’t have to be anything fancy either, just a tab showing revenue, Expenses and a simple formula calculating net profit. Eventually, there will be a need to transition to actual bookkeeping software, but this can be sufficient for businesses just starting out with very low transaction volume.
Even if you plan to handle your own bookkeeping, I highly recommend getting a professional to set things up right from the start. It’ll save you a ton of headaches down the road. If you want help getting started, book a call with me, I’ll make sure your chart of accounts, and opening balances are set up properly, all while guiding you through what accounting method your business should use.
Hire a Bookkeeper
Honestly, you probably don’t want to do your books forever anyways. Your time is much better spent working on growing the business, rather than in the business. When you are ready to hand it off let’s talk, I’d love to help you take accounting off your plate so you can get back to focusing on your business.
Year End Tasks
One task specific to year end is prepping, filing and distributing 1099’s to all qualified vendors and non-employees that meet the requirements to receive a form 1099.
Pro Tip: As you onboard new vendors and suppliers require a completed W-9 form prior to first payment, this eliminates delays in form prep and filing.
At Year End, your bookkeeping will likely require a few adjustments. These are typically done through journal entries in the accounting software. If you are using excel, these transactions can get complicated so it’s best to let a professional accountant or your tax preparer handle them.
A good tax preparer will check to ensure everything is accurate for filing, but ensure your books are reconciled to bank and credit card statements.
Once everything is reconciled and adjusted, you can generate your year-end financial statements and hand them off to your tax preparer to complete the return.
Emergency Fund or Cash Runway
The last point I wanted to touch on is the importance of having an emergency fund or cash runway for unexpected expenses or events.
Revenue can fluctuate throughout the year, but many expenses such as equipment payments, insurance and payroll are fixed. Having cash on hand helps reduce stress during slower periods and ensures you can still cover your core expenses. For smaller businesses without rent or employees, I recommend 3–6-month reserve if possible. As the business grows, your cash reserves should grow too. For larger businesses with employees and rent I recommend at 6-12 months minimum cash on hand.
To Recap
Financial statements are essential for business owners because they guide decision making, ensure accurate tax filings and support financing opportunities.
Three key reports to understand are the income statement, balance sheet and statement of cash flows. Each provides insights into profitabilit, financial health and cash movement.
Consistent bookkeeping - In QuickBooks Online its necessary to track, reconcile and prepare transactions for management review and tax purposes.
Maintaining proper documentation such as receipts, invoices and bank records safeguards deductions and provides support in case of an IRS audit.
Building and maintaining a cash reserve or emergency fund ensures businesses can cover fixed expenses and remain stable during slow or unpredictable periods.
Till next time,
Cheers!
Preston Kidd, MBA