Most small business owners start out doing their own books. They use a spreadsheet or QuickBooks, they categorize transactions, and they muddle through. For a very early-stage business with simple finances, this can work. But there’s a point where doing your own bookkeeping starts costing you more than hiring someone would ? and most business owners pass that point long before they realize it.
1. You’re Spending More Than a Few Hours a Month on It
Bookkeeping is one of the most time-intensive administrative tasks in a small business. If you’re spending four or more hours per month on data entry, bank reconciliation, invoice tracking, and expense categorization, that’s time you’re not spending on the work that actually generates revenue.
Run the math: if you bill at $100/hour and spend six hours per month on books, that’s $600 worth of your time. A bookkeeper typically costs $200?$400/month for a small business with moderate transaction volume. You’re paying more to do it yourself ? in lost revenue ? than outsourcing would cost.
2. You Don’t Know If You’re Actually Profitable
This sounds basic, but it’s common: business owners have a rough feel for whether they’re busy, but they can’t tell you with confidence whether their business made money last month. If you can’t pull up a current P&L and know what it means, your bookkeeping isn’t serving you as a management tool ? it’s just a tax exercise you do once a year.
A bookkeeper provides monthly financials that let you see profit by month, track expenses as a percentage of revenue, and catch problems early. That visibility is what turns bookkeeping from a compliance task into a business intelligence tool.
3. Tax Time Is Always Chaotic
If every year you’re spending weeks in January and February gathering receipts, reconciling accounts, and trying to remember what that $450 charge in March was for ? your books aren’t being maintained properly throughout the year.
A bookkeeper who keeps your books current month by month makes tax time almost effortless. Your CPA or Enrolled Agent gets clean, reconciled financials and can focus on strategy rather than cleanup. Many clients report that tax preparation fees drop after they hire a bookkeeper ? because the tax professional’s time is spent on higher-value work.
4. You’ve Made Bookkeeping Errors That Cost You Money
Miscategorized expenses mean you miss deductions. Uncollected invoices mean revenue goes unrecognized. Duplicate entries distort your P&L. Sales tax collected but not tracked correctly means a headache with the state.
These aren’t just administrative problems ? they’re financial problems. Every miscategorized expense is a deduction you might not claim. Every unreconciled account is a potential error you won’t catch until it’s already caused damage.
5. You’re Growing Fast
Growth is the most common trigger for bookkeeping overwhelm. More clients means more invoices. More revenue means more expenses. More employees or contractors means payroll and 1099s. Each layer of complexity multiplies the bookkeeping workload. A business that was manageable to track at $150,000 in revenue becomes a real burden at $400,000.
Hiring a bookkeeper ahead of growth ? or right at the inflection point ? prevents the backlog that builds up when you’re too busy to keep up with the books. A backlog that takes weeks to clean up is far more expensive than prevention.
6. You Have Employees or Contractors
Payroll introduces an entirely new layer of compliance: payroll tax deposits, quarterly 941 filings, W-2 preparation, year-end reconciliation. Contractor relationships require W-9 collection and January 1099 filings. Getting any of these wrong triggers penalties.
If you have even one employee, the bookkeeping complexity increases substantially. This is often the tipping point where DIY stops making sense.
7. You’re Planning to Apply for a Loan or Line of Credit
Lenders require current financial statements ? typically profit & loss statements and balance sheets for the past two to three years. If your books are messy, incomplete, or maintained on a spreadsheet, you either won’t qualify or you’ll spend weeks getting the financials in order before the application.
Businesses with clean, professionally maintained books are better positioned for financing. The lender sees a business that’s managed its finances properly, which reduces perceived risk.
What to Look for When Hiring a Bookkeeper
Not all bookkeepers offer the same services. As you evaluate options, ask:
- Do they specialize in your industry?
- What software do they use and are they certified in it?
- Do they provide monthly financial statements, or just data entry?
- Do they handle payroll, or only bookkeeping?
- Will they communicate proactively when they see something unusual, or only respond when you ask?
- Do they work with your CPA or EA at tax time?
The Bookkeeper vs. Accountant Distinction
A bookkeeper records and categorizes transactions, reconciles accounts, and produces financial statements. An accountant or Enrolled Agent interprets those statements, files tax returns, and provides tax strategy. You typically need both ? and they work best together when the bookkeeping is clean and current.
At Simple Books Now, bookkeeping and tax services are offered together, which means your books and your tax strategy are aligned from month one. If any of the seven signs above sound familiar, book a free call and we’ll talk about what clean books could mean for your business.