Guides solo founders in bookkeeping setup, revenue/expense tracking, tax prep, SaaS revenue recognition, and accounting software selection like QuickBooks, Xero, Wave.
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Messy books cost you money in taxes, missed deductions, and accountant fees. This skill helps you set up clean financial tracking from day one — 30 minutes a week keeps you legal, informed, and out of trouble.
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Messy books cost you money in taxes, missed deductions, and accountant fees. This skill helps you set up clean financial tracking from day one — 30 minutes a week keeps you legal, informed, and out of trouble.
Before your first dollar of revenue:
- [ ] Open a separate business bank account (checking)
- [ ] Get a business credit card (or dedicated personal card for business only)
- [ ] Set up accounting software (see recommendations below)
- [ ] Create a simple chart of accounts
- [ ] Set up Stripe (or payment processor) to deposit to business account
- [ ] Save a folder for receipts (digital — Google Drive, Dropbox, or in your accounting tool)
- [ ] Note your fiscal year start date (usually Jan 1 for calendar year)
Why it matters:
How:
| Stage | Tool | Cost | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-revenue | Spreadsheet | Free | Don't over-invest before revenue |
| $0-5k MRR | Wave | Free | Full accounting, free, good for solo |
| $0-10k MRR | QuickBooks Self-Employed | $15/mo | Simple, widely supported by accountants |
| $5k-50k MRR | QuickBooks Online | $30+/mo | Standard. Every accountant knows it |
| $5k-50k MRR | Xero | $15+/mo | Clean UI, good for SaaS |
| Any stage | Bench | $299+/mo | Done-for-you bookkeeping service |
The short answer: Start with Wave (free) or QuickBooks Online. Switch to QBO when you hire an accountant — it's what they all use.
Connect Stripe to your accounting software to auto-import transactions:
Your chart of accounts is the list of categories for your money. Keep it simple:
REVENUE
Subscription Revenue (MRR from customers)
One-Time Revenue (setup fees, lifetime deals)
COST OF GOODS SOLD (COGS)
Hosting & Infrastructure (Vercel, Supabase, AWS, etc.)
Payment Processing Fees (Stripe fees, ~2.9% + $0.30)
Third-Party APIs (SendGrid, Twilio, OpenAI, etc.)
OPERATING EXPENSES
Software & Tools (GitHub, Figma, analytics, etc.)
Marketing & Advertising (Google Ads, sponsorships, etc.)
Contractors & Freelancers (developers, designers, writers)
Legal & Professional (lawyer, accountant, registered agent)
Domain & DNS (domain registrar, Cloudflare)
Office & Equipment (computer, monitor, desk — if home office)
Education & Training (courses, books, conferences)
Insurance (if applicable)
Miscellaneous (catch-all — keep this small)
OTHER
Owner Draw / Distribution (money you take out for yourself)
Owner Contribution (money you put in from personal funds)
Spend 30 minutes every week. It prevents the year-end panic.
Weekly (pick a day, be consistent):
- [ ] Categorize new transactions in accounting software
- [ ] Upload receipts for any expense over $75
- [ ] Reconcile bank account (does your software match your bank?)
- [ ] Note any unusual transactions to ask your accountant about
Monthly (first week of each month):
- [ ] Review Profit & Loss statement
- [ ] Check: Is revenue matching what Stripe shows?
- [ ] Check: Are expenses categorized correctly?
- [ ] Review cash balance — how many months of runway do you have?
- [ ] Set aside estimated tax payment (see Tax section)
Revenue is recognized when you deliver the service, not when you receive payment.
Example:
- Customer pays $1,200 for annual plan on March 1
- You DON'T book $1,200 as March revenue
- You book $100/month for 12 months (March through February)
Why: You owe them 12 months of service. Until delivered, it's "deferred revenue" (a liability).
If you expect to owe $1,000+ in taxes, the IRS wants quarterly estimated payments:
Due dates:
- Q1: April 15
- Q2: June 15
- Q3: September 15
- Q4: January 15 (of the following year)
How much to set aside:
- Rule of thumb: 25-30% of net profit (revenue - expenses)
- Transfer this to a separate savings account each month
- Pay quarterly estimates from that account
Likely deductible (confirm with your accountant):
- [ ] Hosting and infrastructure costs
- [ ] Software subscriptions used for business
- [ ] Payment processing fees (Stripe)
- [ ] Contractor payments
- [ ] Home office (dedicated space, % of rent/mortgage)
- [ ] Internet (business % of your bill)
- [ ] Computer and equipment
- [ ] Domain registration and renewal
- [ ] Professional services (legal, accounting)
- [ ] Business insurance
- [ ] Education directly related to your business
- [ ] Marketing and advertising expenses
- [ ] Travel for business purposes (conferences, customer meetings)
Do it yourself: Pre-revenue to ~$2k MRR (use software, keep clean books)
Annual tax prep: $2k-10k MRR (hire a CPA for year-end, do bookkeeping yourself)
Monthly accountant: $10k+ MRR (hire a bookkeeper or service like Bench)
Finding a good accountant:
Shows revenue minus expenses = profit (or loss) for a period.
Review monthly. Ask:
- Is revenue growing month over month?
- Are expenses growing faster than revenue?
- What are my top 3 expense categories?
- What's my profit margin? (profit / revenue × 100)
Shows money in and money out, regardless of when revenue is "earned."
Review monthly. Ask:
- How much cash do I have today?
- How many months of expenses can I cover? (runway)
- Am I cash-flow positive? (more coming in than going out)
Shows what you own (assets), what you owe (liabilities), and your equity.
Review quarterly. Less important at early stage, but needed for:
- Applying for business loans or credit
- Talking to potential investors
- Understanding deferred revenue
| Mistake | Fix |
|---|---|
| Mixing personal and business finances | Separate bank accounts from day one |
| Not tracking expenses | Categorize weekly. 30 minutes prevents 30 hours of cleanup |
| Ignoring estimated tax payments | Set aside 25-30% of profit monthly in a separate account |
| No receipts for expenses | Save digital copies of everything over $75 |
| Doing books once a year | Weekly categorization, monthly review |
| DIY taxes past $10k MRR | Hire a CPA. They pay for themselves in avoided mistakes |
| Confusing Stripe revenue with accounting revenue | Stripe payouts include refunds, fees, and timing differences |
| No emergency fund for the business | Keep 2-3 months of expenses in the business account |