Worried about doing your bookkeeping right? Check out these IRS resources

Bookkeeping worries? Tips to help

I hear it all the time from business owners: "Am I doing this right?" "What if I categorize something wrong?" "How do I know what's deductible?" The worry about making mistakes with your bookkeeping is real, and the fear of "tax jail" can keep you up at night.

Here's something that might surprise you: The IRS actually wants to help you get this right. They've created resources specifically for small business owners - they're just written in tax-speak. (They can't help it; it's their job. That's actually why part of my job is translating tax-speak into regular-people speak for clients.)

Three Ways to Get Your Bookkeeping Right

Before we dive into the resources, let's look at your options:

  1. Hire a bookkeeper to handle everything for you

  2. Work with an accountant who'll guide you and ensure compliance

  3. Use the IRS's free resources to learn the basics yourself

If you're not ready for options 1 or 2 yet, let's focus on option 3. I'm going to show you exactly where to find helpful information on the IRS website, and translate some key points into plain English.

Free IRS Resources You Should Know About

For Basic Record-Keeping

The IRS has an article called “What kind of records should I keep”? See the article for more details.

My translation: Write down everything about money coming in and going out. This means:

  • All customer payments (invoices, sales)

  • All business expenses (with receipts)

  • Keep these records organized and accessible

For New Business Owners

Look up "Publication 583: Starting a Business and Keeping Records"

I wish I'd found this when I first started my business. It covers:

  • What to know about starting a business

  • What records you need to keep

  • What matters to the IRS

For Small Business Basics

Check out the IRS "Small Business and Self-Employed" webpage for:

For Tax Planning

Two helpful tools:

If This Makes You More Anxious

First, I'm sorry! That wasn't the goal. These resources are meant to help, not add to your stress.

Second, if reading tax-speak makes your head spin, that's completely normal. That's why bookkeepers and accountants exist - we're here to translate this stuff into normal human language.

Previous
Previous

Tips from a Bookkeeping Cleanup Specialist: 3 Common Issues Found in Books

Next
Next

The One Place Method for Your Bookkeeping: Simplify your business finances with this tip