A practical “no-accountant” bookkeeping routine that actually sticks (UK-focused) When bookkeeping slips, it’s usually for two reasons: (1) receipts and bank transactions aren’t captured quickly, and (2) there’s no fixed rhythm for reconciling and checking what HMRC will want. A simple system can keep it under control without eating your week.
1) Set up the foundations once Separate money properly - Ltd company: separate business bank account is non-negotiable. Keep director spending out of it unless it’s a clear expense or you’re recording it as director’s loan / salary / dividend.
- Sole trader/partnership: not legally required, but a separate account saves hours and reduces mistakes.
Pick one bookkeeping tool and stick to it - If VAT-registered, you’ll need Making Tax Digital-compatible software for VAT returns.
- Common choices: Xero, QuickBooks, FreeAgent (often free with some NatWest/RBS/Mettle packages),or Sage.
Create a simple chart of categories Don’t overcomplicate it. Most small businesses can run with:
- Sales
- Cost of sales / materials
- Subcontractors (CIS if relevant)
- Motor/travel
- Software/subscriptions
- Phone/internet
- Rent/office
- Marketing
- Bank fees/interest
- Professional fees
- Wages (if any)
- VAT (if registered)
2) The weekly routine (30–60 minutes) Put a fixed slot in the diary (same day/time each week). The aim is to stop “catch-up bookkeeping”.
Weekly checklist:
- Capture paperwork: photograph/forward receipts and supplier invoices into your system (or a dedicated email like [email protected]).
- Reconcile the bank feed: match every transaction you can, code it, and leave only the ones you genuinely can’t identify.
- Raise sales invoices promptly and chase overdue ones (bookkeeping and cashflow are linked).
- Quick sense-check: does the bank balance in the software match the bank? Any unusual payments? Any personal spend accidentally mixed in?
Rule that helps:
don’t leave uncoded transactions. If you can’t code it in 30 seconds, park it in a “To Review” category and deal with it in the monthly slot.
3) The monthly routine (60–90 minutes) This is where accuracy improves without turning into a full-time job.
Monthly checklist:
- Reconcile all bank accounts and PayPal/Stripe (payment processors are where records often drift).
- Check debtors/creditors: who owes you, who you owe, and whether anything is duplicated.
- VAT check (if VAT-registered): run a VAT report and sanity-check the big numbers (especially reverse charge, EU services, import VAT, and fuel/vehicle VAT restrictions).
- Mileage log update (if claiming mileage) or check motor costs are correctly categorised.
- Back up key documents (cloud storage folder by tax year is fine).
4) Automation that genuinely saves time A few automations give most of the benefit:
- Bank feeds into your bookkeeping software.
- Receipt capture apps (Dext, Hubdoc, AutoEntry, or built-in capture in Xero/QB). Set it so supplier, date, and VAT are read automatically.
- Rules/bank matching rules for regular items (fuel, software subscriptions, card machine fees, rent).
- Payment links on invoices (Stripe/GoCardless) to reduce chasing and improve matching.
5) A simple “HMRC-ready” discipline Keep evidence with the transaction: attach the receipt/invoice to the entry. HMRC doesn’t want a shoebox of paper; it wants a clear link between the cost and the business.
Know your structure’s pressure points - Ltd company: be careful with director’s loan account, personal expenses, and timing of dividends. If you don’t understand an entry, don’t guess—mispostings here cause real problems later.
- Sole trader/partnership: keep a clean split between business and personal, and keep a mileage log if using mileage rates.
- CIS (construction): verify subcontractors, keep deduction statements, and reconcile CIS suffered/deducted monthly.
6) The “catch-up breaker” if you’re already behind If it’s piled up, don’t try to fix it in one heroic weekend. Do it in blocks:
- Start with bank reconciliation month by month.
- Then attach invoices/receipts to the bigger items.
- Leave tiny items for last—getting the bank correct is the backbone.
A workable baseline schedule - Weekly (30–60 mins): capture paperwork + reconcile bank feed.
- Monthly (60–90 mins): full reconciliation + VAT sense-check + debtors/creditors review.
- Quarterly (30 mins): review categories, tidy “To Review”, check you’re setting aside tax/VAT.
If you share whether you’re a
Ltd company or sole trader, whether you’re
VAT-registered, and how you get paid (bank transfer/card/PayPal),it’s possible to suggest a tighter routine and the best automation options for that setup.